When offline transfer saves you
- Flights / trains with airplane mode + hotspot between seats
- Rural sites with Wi‑Fi APs but no uplink
- Events where cellular is shredded by crowds
- Privacy days: you’d rather not upload at all
Three offline methods that work
Method A — Same LAN, dead WAN
Join the office/home SSID even if the fiber is down. As long as client isolation isn’t enabled, local discovery still works. Then follow the normal Android WiFi transfer steps.
Method B — Phone hotspot (best travel mode)
- Phone A: enable hotspot (data can stay off)
- Phone B: join that hotspot
- Open FileFly on both → Online
- Discover / QR → send → accept
This is peer-to-peer over a tiny local network you control. Perfect for file sharing without internet between friends mid-trip.
Method C — Desktop with Computer Hub
Laptop on the same hotspot/LAN can use FileFly’s Computer Hub or FTP mode — see features — to pull camera rolls without USB chaos.
Install before you lose signal. Offline apps help; offline APK installs don’t.
Download FileFly FreeWhat does NOT count as offline
- WhatsApp / Drive / email — need the internet path
- “Share link” tools that still upload first
- Bluetooth for multi-GB (technically offline, practically glacial)
Stay safe on open rooms
Hotspots in shared spaces deserve encryption + PIN. FileFly’s optional ChaCha20‑Poly1305 is for exactly these moments — read bank-level security. You’re offline from the ISP, not invisible on the RF medium.
Pre-trip checklist
- FileFly installed on every device you’ll use
- Know how to enable hotspot without cellular data
- Test one transfer at home (muscle memory beats docs mid-airport)
- Skim FAQ for permission prompts