Sometimes you would like to transfer your downloaded files directly to your phone. This is out of scope for Storykit, but there are a few different ways you could approach this if you need to.
Cloud Storage solutions
Regardless of your computer platform (Windows or macOS) or smartphone platform (Android or iOS, mainly), you could always use a few proven methods for file transfer between computer and phone. These include, but are not limited to, Dropbox, Google Drive, or OneDrive from Microsoft (all of which are platform independent) and iCloud Drive (built-in to macOS + iOS combinations).
These types of could services allow you to sync content from your computer with cloud storage and download the files to your connected smartphone.
Direct Transfer β wireless or connected
There are specific methods that will allow you to directly transfer the files from your computer to your phone without the need for cloud syncing. If you are on macOS and have an iPhone, you could use a wireless solution called Airdrop that allows you to move images and videos directly from the computer to the Image library on the phone. If you can get this to work, it's probably the easiest solution.
If you're using an Android phone, there are apps and services like Airdroid (paid solution), that allow you to access your phone from a browser on your computer and to transfer files over your local wireless network β both to and from the phone.
An old-school but almost bulletproof solution is the old "email it to yourself" trick. So attach the files to an email that you send to yourself and then open that email on your phone and download them from the email client on the phone. This is more or less the same as having a cloud sync solution going. This could, however, cause the files to be automatically compressed.
These are all suggestions for methods and services that Storykit can't control but are to the extent that we can see are serious and well-functioning.
