Posted September 16, 200618 yr I've been trying to email a video taken with a digital camera. I compressed it to a ZIP file, and when I try to send it via email, my computer freezes. What am I doing wrong? Or do you need more information? And no, I haven't switched to Thunderbird yet, lol.
September 16, 200618 yr why not try uploading it to a online hosting site, then emailing the link to your friends? )corjello(
September 16, 200618 yr Author Because I didn't think about it. But still, I should be able to email it though, right?
September 16, 200618 yr sure, but i would think that some email programs would have trouble with a .zip. i dont really know, im just guessing. who do you use for isp? try attatching it from the web based email )corjello(
September 16, 200618 yr Administrator What is the file size when it's compressed? Does your pop server (Hotmail, Yahoo, GMail, etc) have an attachment limit? Is your virus scanner running and slowing the process of the transfer, making it time-out.
September 16, 200618 yr Hey trish, If the file is to big, try running it through Windows Movie Maker. Play with it till you find the smallest file size that's not grainy.
September 16, 200618 yr why not try uploading it to a online hosting site, then emailing the link to your friends? )corjello( <{POST_SNAPBACK}> So far corjello's suggestion is the best in my opinion. The easiest though I have found is transferring them through IM. Email has a size limit, and usually won't allow zip files (I have found from my experience). Good Luck! :D
September 16, 200618 yr Author Thanks, everyone. I'm going to work with it again today...I'll let you know what happens. :D
September 17, 200618 yr Trish, I can't explain the freezing (that could be an issue with your computer), but like others have said, there will be limits imposed on attachments. For example, gmail only allows emails of 10Mb or less to be sent. That limitation includes any text in the body of the email as well, meaning the attachment would need to be smaller than 10Mb. You could try changing the file extension, instead of being called "video.wmv" for example, name it "video.txt", just be sure to tell the recipient what they need to rename it as when the receive it. The renaming bit does work btw because I have tried it.
September 17, 200618 yr The renaming method is good, since GMail doesn't allow you to send .zip files, etc. Just make sure that the person you're sending it to can view file file extensions, they're hidden by default in XP.
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