Mac. Windows. Linux. iPhone. Android.
One app.
AirDrop only talks to other Apple gear. Quick Share skips iPhones. MagicShare doesn't care what you own — paste a link, pick a photo, or drop a file, and it shows up on every device.
You shouldn’t need a workaround
to send yourself a link.
Shared clipboards only work between matching brands. AirDrop ignores Android. Quick Share ignores iPhone. So you end up emailing yourself, DMing yourself, or typing the URL by hand on a different keyboard. MagicShare just sends it.
If you mix platforms — Mac + Android, Windows + iPhone, Linux + anything — the small stuff falls apart constantly.
One app on every device. Drop a file. Or paste a link. Pick where it goes. That’s the whole flow.
Your devices, introduced.
Install MagicShare on each device and tap “add to my devices.” No email, no phone number — just an anonymous account that ties your devices together so they recognize each other later.
Three steps. Zero ceremony.
Files travel directly between your devices, end-to-end encrypted — never through a third-party server. The internet is only used so your devices can find each other.
Drag a file onto MagicShare, or onto the screen-corner hot zone. Paste a link to send a URL instead.
Pick a device. Or many — fan out to your phone, tablet and laptop in one shot. They’re always there in the list.
Files land in Downloads. Links open in the default browser. Even if the app wasn’t already open on the other side.
Built for the many-device life.
Fan out a file to your phone, laptop, tablet — all at once, in parallel. No queueing, no doing it four times.
Files are scrambled with a key only your devices share. Even we couldn’t read them if we wanted to.
You don’t have to open the app on the other side first. Send, tap the notification, done.
Same Wi-Fi, different Wi-Fi, or mobile data — as long as both devices have internet, you’re good.
Paste a URL on one device, tap the notification on another, and the link opens in the default browser.
Cloud features are additive. A MagicShare device can still send to a stock LocalSend device on the same LAN.