How to get around a maximum email size limit.

Stephen Partington cryptworks at gmail.com
Tue Sep 13 06:26:53 MST 2016


I will second this. Email is the wrong medium for large file transfer.
Google drive, hosted website, or a similar service is the correct way to
go. However in order to save the headache of long term hosting I would
suggest you let them know the files will be available for 30 days before
being archived so you can pull them out of the hosting space. This is also
where box really is nice because you can create a share link with password
that does not require them to log in or join the service to download files
but you can still protect them.

Web hosting is good also but can be much more expensive and laborious. But
does have the advantage of being a central web presence and gallery for
your clients.

On Sep 12, 2016 7:22 PM, "David Schwartz" <newsletters at thetoolwiz.com>
wrote:

> I am a photographer and the images I send my clients
>>>
>>
> Sound like this is a business endeavor for you. You should have the common
> sense to pay for services that complement your business and make life
> easier FOR YOUR CLIENTS!
>
> Email is absolutely the WRONG MEDIA to use for shipping large files. And
> it would make life MISERABLE on your clients!
>
> Why? Because most hosted mailboxes (not things like GMail) are limited to
> 250MB in size, unless explicitly changed.
>
> Think … Microsoft Exchange Server, which is extremel common for lots of
> businesses. Even Linux servers running common email services often set up
> their default mailbox size to 250MB.
>
> The fact is, you have no idea how much storage any client’s mailbox might
> have in it. Like voicemail, lots of people don’t bother deleting stuff
> until someone tells them they got an email bounced back saying their
> mailbox is full. Shoving a bunch of humonguous files at them is a surefire
> way to piss them off.
>
>
> The whole world is moving to cloud storage. There’s a reason: you don’t
> have to be responsible for (managing) the hosting!
>
> Maybe this article will help:
>
> http://www.zdnet.com/article/whats-the-best-cloud-storage-for-you/
> <https://u2206659.ct.sendgrid.net/wf/click?upn=tzJbcg2o-2FNh3kfIF32sRUXPljEItXMcqivfnkcL0p4esVnjIWKmEbfOXBEWSEHm5ZPVKJ4Ymp4XYMJ8s02ssx3YSPvqxNvn-2BAxTO-2F8BJ2EI-3D_6lpMB7VLnN-2Fj9-2FEErg8-2F-2BMBpb5QxlByTgv2M3fbWD9ebvC-2BWrN3h7jImK8EVWYBeNuCW-2Ff2ZhYK0wP-2FD-2BsGFcBdCYNzuZdLgaID0v3fv4yUH49sSt-2FoTCOw7JI0EyspWqw4IMCCUKiNuFZ9YpY9HtcPFVkxP-2BF6Rj5VTaDZTtcsoxkbL9Yju7VFM7pbsrS1t45ZNgVvxbAOGIznAx1FGXmgdho1Z1HR2ndBPiHhm7X0-3D>
>
> One more that I’d suggest if you want to host something at your home or
> office:
>
> http://tonido.com
> <https://u2206659.ct.sendgrid.net/wf/click?upn=wrxW7yd9X5Kwb4Gg1HqxdUbsWf8J30OpzA8V8siGMOU-3D_6lpMB7VLnN-2Fj9-2FEErg8-2F-2BMBpb5QxlByTgv2M3fbWD9ebvC-2BWrN3h7jImK8EVWYBeNuCW-2Ff2ZhYK0wP-2FD-2BsGFcNWrcWTvN3oUf3i-2FyUovb3oh5S3BmwGD0dF9ctR92-2Fuk1Zg7mzrT0UYPCHyuC5AFcfWXupoWPGc0b-2BOWQGlNeYJTcA7SPgcacypaYqqWJpmPrIE6vxoWa-2BIJ6-2BZ1eP9yDds-2FaH-2F40o-2BHsKhfT8-2BXPok-3D>
>
> The only problem with hosting something like Tonido at home is that, while
> the time to upload a gig or two of data to the device is fairly fast FOR
> YOU over your local network, anybody OUTSIDE of your local network will
> have to suffer through whatever your ISP’s upload throttle is set to —
> 10-20 megs is “fast” for most plans these days, and will result in several
> hours per gig.
>
> Your best bet, IMHO, is to use a cloud-based service like Dropbox that
> lets you send a link to individual files or folders to your client. They
> get the benefit of full-bandwidth downloads without the penalty of having
> their mailbox “mail-bombed” by your huge payloads that might not even fit.
>
> BTW, Dropbox has a nice feature whereby if you send a link to a folder
> that contains images, they automatically set up an image browser for you!
>
> Also, the MONTHLY cost for most of these services is LESS than the cost to
> send a DVD disk via overnight mail ONCE.
>
> If you’re in this to make money, you should go with the cheapest, most
> effective option that makes your clients happy.
>
> Stuffing huge files into their mailbox might be cheap, but it’s sure not
> gonna make them happy! (And it will probalby fail more often than not,
> making them even more unhappy because of the hassle.)
>
> Shipping DVDs via overnight mail might not be an issue for your clients,
> but it sure ain’t cheap. And it’s a hassle for you.
>
> -David "The Tool Wiz" Schwartz
>
>
>
> On Sep 12, 2016, at 6:37 PM, Michael <bmike1 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> So the only way I'm going to get the file to them is to physically mail it
> to them? I don't want to be responsible for hosting them.
>
> On Mon, Sep 12, 2016 at 9:33 PM, Anon Anon <lokotejones at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Email is not the correct format for files that size. Host them on an
>> external tool like a webserver or ftp server.
>>
>> On Sep 12, 2016 6:32 PM, "Michael" <bmike1 at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I wrote this email to my email provider and would like to implore the
>>> PLUG's brain-trust if they know of a way to do this incase my provider
>>> laughs at me.
>>>
>>> Hi. I would like to discuss your limitation of only allowing an email to
>>> be 25MB. I am a photographer and the images I send my clients totals to
>>> around 127 MB. I've gotten around your limitation by sending the pictures
>>> in multiple emails. Unfortunately that is no longer going to work due to
>>> the fact that I am soon going to be producing videos for my clients. Videos
>>> , as you may well know, are  MUCH larger than photographs. The only way I
>>> see a way around the 25MB limitation is to host the videos on an external
>>> website (I'm thinking Google Drive) but I would really much rather give
>>> them what they are paying me for. As such I would like for you to increase
>>> the maximum allowed size for me.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
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