Share Text From Phone to Computer Instantly
No apps, no accounts, no cloud storage.
Sharing text between your phone and computer should be simple. Instead, most solutions force you to install apps, create accounts, or upload your content to someone else's server. AmanMaps takes a different approach: a direct browser-to-browser connection that takes three seconds to set up and leaves no trace when you are done.
How to share text from phone to computer
- 1
Open AmanMaps on your computer
Go to amanmaps.com — no installation, no sign-up.
- 2
Scan the QR code with your phone
Point your camera at the screen. Your phone opens the session automatically.
- 3
Type or paste text on your phone
Text arrives on your computer instantly through a direct encrypted channel.
Why use AmanMaps?
- No app required — Everything runs in the browser on both devices.
- No account needed — Zero sign-up, zero configuration.
- No cloud storage — Your text travels directly between devices via WebRTC. No server ever sees it.
- Instant delivery — Text appears on your computer the moment you send it from your phone.
- Ephemeral by design — Close the tab and everything is gone. No history, no traces.
What can you share?
Any text content works: links, notes, passwords, code snippets, addresses, phone numbers, two-factor codes, or anything else you can type or paste on your phone. URLs are detected and rendered as clickable links on the computer screen.
Common use cases
- Send a link from your phone to your computer without emailing yourself.
- Transfer a Wi-Fi password from your phone to a computer you are setting up.
- Copy a two-factor authentication code from your phone to your computer.
- Share notes or research between your phone and laptop during a meeting.
- Move a phone number or address from your phone to a browser on your computer.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to be on the same Wi-Fi network?
No. AmanMaps works over the internet through WebRTC. You don't need to be on the same network.
Is it safe to share passwords this way?
Yes. The connection is direct peer-to-peer — no server sees the content. The session key is transmitted in the URL fragment (#), which browsers never send to servers.
Does it work on iPhone and Android?
Yes. Both iOS and Android cameras can scan the QR code, and both Chrome and Safari support the WebRTC connection.