As per usual when I am out of the office for a while I get the usual “Your mailbox is over its size limit” as I do send and receive a large amount of e-mail (even more so when I am out of the office as it is my main form of communication).
Now it’s very difficult to archive from a remote location, so I do go through and trim a few e-mails and download and then delete large attachments.
However was very surprised to see literally one day after doing this he “Your mailbox is over its size limit” message again, I checked I hadn’t received any new BIG e-mails for a while, so I thought I know I suspect that an all staff e-mail with a large attachment had been sent round.
And boy was I right!
Somone (who shall remain nameless as this is a public blog) had sent for sending to all staff an e-mail with a single Word document as an attachment.
This Word document was a single page document, with some pictures on it.
This Word document in terms of file size was large, nay huge, nay really really BIG!
It was 17MB, that’s right seventeen MB!
17MB for a single page document!
Obviously the person who had created the document had taken some photographs with a digital camera and inserted them into the word document, resized them so they fit on the page, but not resized them in terms of file size!
17MB for a single page document!
Now with other a thousand staff, that means the mail server was choked with 20GB from a single e-mail!
I suspect I was not the only one who received the “Your mailbox is over its size limit” e-mail this weekend and I suspect that there will be a lot of people who will be very annoyed and will just delete the Word document without opening or downloading it.
Really that file should have never been sent, posted as a link perhaps (but would you download a 17MB Word document).
I did go ahead and print it as a PDF and got it down to 300KB without trying which is still large, but so much better than 17MB.
Maybe next time a simple text e-mail would have sufficed.
I used to tell staff to put such general All Staff mail in the relevant public folder, then if necessary, send a normal email round to highlight it. That way, only one copy of the large file is on the server.
I guess this is a good opportunity to educate staff on how to reduce file size! But it’s never a good idea to send an attachment to everybody anyway…
And we need to educate how easy it is to compress images in Word or PowerPoint
http://davefoord.wordpress.com/2007/10/30/compressing-images-in-powerpoint-or-word/