
A New Way to Share: Huawei’s Air Gesture Innovation
Technology had always thrived on making the impossible look effortless. Huawei stepped into that arena with the Mate 70, unveiling an air gesture feature that turned file sharing into a simple wave of the hand. It carried the weight of innovation but delivered with the lightness of magic.
The feature relied on the phone’s front camera and under-screen sensors to recognise movements in real time. By opening a photo, a user raised their palm toward the display, clenched a fist to “grab,” and extended the motion toward another Huawei device. With an unclench, the file travelled instantly—seamlessly through Huawei Share. Bluetooth managed discovery, Wi-Fi managed speed, and AI managed the accuracy of the gestures.
The receiving device detected the drop at the exact moment, matching the gesture with a fast, invisible handoff. The exchange felt natural, almost as if two people had passed a physical photograph from one palm to another, yet the entire transfer happened in the air.
This launch revealed how human-centred design elevated technology. It showed that when complex systems met simple gestures, adoption became intuitive. The innovation didn’t demand a tutorial; it simply invited a hand wave. Beyond the technical brilliance, it reminded the world that the most powerful technology echoed everyday habits—natural, instinctive, and universal.
Huawei’s Mate 70 introduced more than a feature—it introduced a new interaction between humans and machines. A gesture that once signalled hello, goodbye, or stop now carried a file across devices. By turning an ordinary wave into extraordinary utility, Huawei set a new precedent for how devices could understand and respond to us.