Crosswords1 min ago
emailing pictures
10 Answers
Is it right that my e-mail (Outlook 2010) cannot handle sending 1 jpeg of 3MB (a simple photo)?
It just sits in the outbox clogging up the sytem.
It just sits in the outbox clogging up the sytem.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Prudie. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Outlook has a default setting of a maximum file size of 20Mb for attachments. However most email providers set a much lower limit, often around 2Mb. So it's not Outlook which is refusing to send the file, it's your email service.
If you're sending a picture solely to be displayed on screen, you should try to make it a sensible size of no more than, say, 0.1Mb. If you're sending a picture to be printed out at postcard size, you might want to make the file size around 0.3Mb. Bigger sizes are just pointless.
If you really need to send the full size file, upload it to a suitable free service and send the recipient a download link:
https://www.transferbigfiles.com/
http://www.dropsend.com/
http://www.sendspace.com/
Chris
If you're sending a picture solely to be displayed on screen, you should try to make it a sensible size of no more than, say, 0.1Mb. If you're sending a picture to be printed out at postcard size, you might want to make the file size around 0.3Mb. Bigger sizes are just pointless.
If you really need to send the full size file, upload it to a suitable free service and send the recipient a download link:
https://www.transferbigfiles.com/
http://www.dropsend.com/
http://www.sendspace.com/
Chris
The more recent versions of Windows have an image resizing facility built into them but my own preference would be to use Irfanview, which is a free image viewing and editing program which deserves a place on everyone's computer. (it also works on all versions of Windows).
Download and install the program:
http://www.irfanview.com/
Then open your picture in Irfanview.
Go to Image > Resize/Resample
You'll see lots of complicated looking options but just choose a suitable size from the panel on the right. (640 x 480, or 800 x 600 will be fine for most purposes). Click 'OK'
Then go to File > Save As. Check that the file type is set to JPG (not to the default BMP), choose a suitable name (such as 'MyDogX' instead of the original 'MyDog'), ensure that the location is where you'd like it to go, and click 'Save'.
You can then close Irfanview and (using Outlook) create a new mail, adding 'MyDogX' as an attachment.
Chris
Download and install the program:
http://www.irfanview.com/
Then open your picture in Irfanview.
Go to Image > Resize/Resample
You'll see lots of complicated looking options but just choose a suitable size from the panel on the right. (640 x 480, or 800 x 600 will be fine for most purposes). Click 'OK'
Then go to File > Save As. Check that the file type is set to JPG (not to the default BMP), choose a suitable name (such as 'MyDogX' instead of the original 'MyDog'), ensure that the location is where you'd like it to go, and click 'Save'.
You can then close Irfanview and (using Outlook) create a new mail, adding 'MyDogX' as an attachment.
Chris