Five ways to shepherd your multimegabyte
behemoths from here to there.
From the July 2003 issue of PC World magazine
We've been sending files to each other via e-mail for
so long, it's become second nature. That's fine for files that can fit
on a floppy, but what about those mondo 5MB PowerPoint presentations,
or humongous 40MB video files? I've come up with five nifty ways--most
free, and the rest dirt cheap--to give these files wings.
Outlook Express 6 has a cool
file-transfer feature. The program will effortlessly--and
automatically--break a large file attachment into chunks and send each
part in a separate e-mail message. The file is reassembled--again
automatically--in the recipient's in-box. The catch? Both ends must
use Outlook Express or another e-mail client that supports multipart
messages--otherwise the person on the receiving end gets files
containing gobbledygook. So it's best to use this feature to send
large attachments only to known OE users. Click Tools, Accounts
and choose your e-mail account. Select Mail, Properties, Advanced,
check Break apart messages larger than, and enter 1000
into the KB field. Outlook Express will then break apart any
attachment over 1MB.
But this is computing, folks, so
sometimes the magic doesn't work. When it fails, simply highlight all
the messages in your in-box that contain parts of the file, then
select Messages, Combine and Decode. Reorder the messages if
necessary, then click OK. The reassembled file will open; save
it by choosing File, Save As. Nice, eh?
Another option is Yahoo's
Briefcase
online service, a handy, free way to move and store up to 30MB of
data. Just upload files into your briefcase, then use the service to
send your buddy or coworker an e-mail message with a link to the file.
I have multiple briefcases, some private, some available to others.
It's a great service, provided you can deal with Yahoo's confusing
registration and its intrusive, blaring ads. One other caveat: No
single file can be larger than 5MB.
Alternatively, you can make large
files accessible by uploading them to a Web site. Finding a Web site
for file storage is a snap. If your ISP doesn't offer free Web
storage, check out the
100 Best
Free Web Space Providers site. To upload files to my storage site,
I use the free
FTP Explorer program. Once the files are uploaded, all I need to
do is send the recipients a link to them.
Many people use instant messengers
from AOL, Yahoo, MSN, and my favorite, Cerulean Studios' Trillian.cc
site, to transfer files of virtually unlimited size with just a few
keystrokes. If you lose the connection in mid-transfer, though, you
must start again from scratch. And if you have a router with a
built-in firewall, all bets are off--unless you have a computer-savvy
friend (no, not me) to help you navigate the tricky firewall exception
settings.
Pay a Little, Store a Lot
If you transfer lots of files--and
you need plenty of space to store them--use a fee-based file-holding
Web site. Their methods vary, but most of these services let you send
an e-mail message containing a link for file retrieval. The catch is
that pesky fee, though many sites do give you a free trial.
Try out Fliles' Basic File Management Service, with 200 Mb for the
first month at the low price of $9.95! Send large files securely and
quickly via the web, avoiding the attachment limitations of email
servers. Files are sent and delivered immediately - no more compressed
files, zip disks, costly overnight mail or bounce backs! Fast and
Easy.
But there's an even better deal to
be had. Znail.com provides up to 5MB of free storage; a buck a year
gets you 20MB, and 50MB costs only $10 a year. To share data, you tell
recipients your user name and password. The site has some download
restrictions, but they're not onerous: You can download only twice the
amount of your Znail 'disk' per day, and only five times your disk's
amount per week.
Before I tried these services I
never would've imagined that file management could be such a moving
experience.
Contributing Editor Steve Bass runs the Pasadena
IBM Users Group. Contact him at
homeoffice@pcworld.com,
and click the link for more
Home
Office columns. Go to
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