English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-09-26 06:15:04 · 6 answers · asked by rajat_bhatt2002 1 in Computers & Internet Internet

6 answers

None, all the emails have 1 or 2GB of total storage, but the attachments are restricted to 10 MB each mail.

But, the good news, i know an application, its called "Peer 2 Mail" or "P2M", this application takes your files (1GB files), split them into 10 MB mails, and send them to your account.
If you check your mail account, you'll see like 2 hundred mails containing parts of your file. but nothing to worry, P2M can join and download all this mails and join back the file for you, so its like sending and receiving one simple mail, with a simple file

You can download P2M on www.softonic.com, and its completely free

2006-09-26 06:24:02 · answer #1 · answered by André C 2 · 0 0

If you have trouble with that size attachment, Outlook Express (and probably many others) allows you to fragment the email & attachment. When the email arrives at the other end (this is true if handled by OE. But I've never tried with other clients), it just puts the fragments together again.

That would reduce the problem to the size of ISP's mailbox. You migh need to send 100 10Mb segments & have the recipient receive them, as soon as they arrive - that might stop the mailbox filling up.

2006-09-26 13:19:01 · answer #2 · answered by dryheatdave 6 · 0 0

★★ TRANSFER LARGE FILES ★★

◙ Here is a much better alternative to sending large files as email attachments. Most email providers limit attacment sizes to 10 megsbytes or less. With this service your limit is one gigabyte.

◙ TIP: Before attempting to do the following I suggest that you turn off your computer to reset all of your system's defaults and to reallocate memory. This way you computer is less likely to crash while uploading your large files. Remember anything that can go wrong will go wrong and it will cause as much pain and grief as possible! So why take a chance?

◙ Intructions: Very Easy!

1) Go to the link below.
2) When it asks for a friend's email address you can put as many friends email addresses in there as you like as long as you separate them with commas.
3) Click on BROWSE to locate your file on your hard drive. Double-click the filename and the it will appear in the filename box.
4) Enter your own email address.
5) Click the submit button to upload the file.
6) Now the server will send an email to each friend with a link for them to come and download the file. You have the option of delting the file youeself after your friends download it or leave it and it will automatically be deleted after 7 days.

☞ http://www.yousendit.com/

2006-09-26 13:25:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I cant think of a public mail provider that is going to allow that. You need to be BOTH sending and receiving using a private or corporate mail system that either you can manage or can request to have it configured for that file size.

It is far more typical to send large files using FTP rather than email.

2006-09-26 13:18:32 · answer #4 · answered by Chuck C 3 · 0 0

Don't even think about doing this. Store the file somewhere and let people download it.

If you could actually send a 1-gig file, you would basically hang my mail program while it tried to download it. I wouldn't know what was going on and would assume something was wrong.

Don't do it this way.

2006-09-26 13:23:51 · answer #5 · answered by jplrvflyer 5 · 0 0

43f3g

2014-08-22 07:18:04 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers