🎙️ Shout Out: 250 Episodes, An Apple Roundup Shout-Out, and Why Android-to-iPhone File Sharing Just Became Every Lawyer's Business
/There are weeks in the legal technology calendar that just feel good—and this past week was one of them. ⚖️ Two things landed almost simultaneously, and I want to take a moment to celebrate both properly right here on The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page.
Jeff Richardson and Brett Burney celebrate 250 Apple podcast episodes.
First, a genuine, enthusiastic congratulations to Jeff Richardson of iPhone J.D. and Brett Burney of Apps in Law on recording their 250th episode of the In the News podcast. 🎉 If you're not familiar with In the News, here's what you need to know: it is a weekly deep-dive into the Apple universe—iPhones, iPads, Macs, Apple Watch, Vision Pro, iOS updates, app releases, and everything in between. Jeff and Brett, both previous podcast guests, approach it as dedicated Apple enthusiasts who also happen to practice law, which gives the show a grounded, practical quality that pure consumer tech coverage rarely achieves. Two hundred and fifty episodes of consistent, high-quality Apple coverage is a remarkable achievement, full stop. 🏔️
And if you watched the video version of Episode 250, you caught Jeff broadcasting from the breathtaking backdrop of The Broadmoor resort in Colorado—where Jeff's firm, Adams & Reese, was celebrating its own 75th anniversary. That kind of serendipity makes a milestone feel even more earned. Subscribe at inthenewspodcast.com—you will not regret it. 🎧
Attorney can use Google Quick Share to bridge iPhone and Android.
Second, in that same week's In the News roundup post, Jeff included a mention of The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page—specifically, our article "How to Use Google's 'AirDrop for Android' (Quick Share) in Your Law Practice." 📲 Jeff's write-up of the week covered everything from Apple's sweeping price increases to iOS 27's five incoming apps to why watching Avatar: Fire and Ash on a Vision Pro on a plane might be the best movie experience currently available to humans. It was, in other words, a quintessentially iPhone J.D. roundup—Apple news, clearly explained, with a sharp eye for what actually matters to readers who live in the Apple ecosystem.
And right there, in that roundup, was a single bullet: "Michael D.J. Eisenberg of The Tech Savvy Lawyer explains how Android devices can now more easily use AirDrop to share files with iPhones." 🙌
That sentence is, on the surface, a consumer Apple tech note—and that's exactly what it should be. Jeff covers it because it is genuinely interesting Apple/mobile news for anyone who carries an iPhone. But for attorneys, the implications go considerably further.
Why This Matters Beyond the Apple Ecosystem 💼
Google expanded Quick Share—its answer to AirDrop—to work directly with Apple's AirDrop across Samsung Galaxy, Google Pixel, and a growing list of flagship Android devices . The transfer happens peer-to-peer: no server routing, no cloud intermediary, no data passing through Google's or Apple's infrastructure. ⚡ For an iPhone-carrying attorney receiving a document from an Android-using co-counsel, paralegal, or client, this is a genuine workflow upgrade.
ABA Model Rules 1.1, 1.6, 5.3 guard lawyer confidentiality.
But it also raises questions that an Apple commentator doesn't need to answer—and that we do. Under ABA Model Rule 1.6 (Confidentiality of Information), the peer-to-peer architecture of Quick Share is actually a feature, not just a convenience: files don't transit external servers, which helps satisfy the "reasonable efforts" standard to prevent unauthorized disclosure of client data. Under ABA Model Rule 1.1 (Competence) and its Comment 8, understanding how a file transfer mechanism works—and whether your firm's use of it is appropriate—is part of your professional obligation, not optional continuing education. And under ABA Model Rule 5.3 (Responsibilities Regarding Nonlawyer Assistance), if your staff are using personal Android devices to share files with iPhone-toting colleagues, you need a written BYOD policy that addresses it. ✅
Our article walks through all of this—device compatibility, step-by-step setup, a five-step firm rollout checklist, and a plain-language BYOD policy framework—so that you can implement this capability confidently and in full compliance with your professional responsibilities . And for a visual walkthrough, our TSL.P Labs Video Presentation: Google Quick Share for Lawyers covers every step in a tactical, ethics-first format . 🎥
The Bigger Picture 🌐
What I appreciate most about getting a mention from iPhone J.D. is the nature of what Jeff's blog is. It is an Apple resource—meticulous, reliable, enthusiast-grade Apple coverage, written by someone who genuinely loves this technology and reads everything. When a piece from The Tech-Savvy Lawyer.Page earns a bullet in Jeff's roundup, it is because the article has something genuinely useful to say about the Apple ecosystem. That is a standard I aim for every time I sit down to write. 📡
So, congratulations to Jeff and Brett on 250 episodes of excellent Apple coverage! And if our Quick Share guide gave even one attorney a smoother courthouse-steps file transfer—or a stronger confidentiality argument—then it earned its mention. 🥂

