It says Gmail but is on the G Suite blog and mentions specifically G Suite Editions. So was wondering earlier today if it applies to G Suite Gmail Only or all gmail customers including @gmail.com?<p>My main question is however how will the receiving more help if the sending limit is still low? Are there any top email providers such as Microsoft, Yahoo, etc, that support sending more than 25MB emails?<p>I think when sending emails to other gmail/g suite users the send limit should be 50mb, but when sending to anyone else should be 25mb, since 99% of others would only be 25mb receiving limit and would be a lot of email bounces otherwise.
For years, I've used a web hosting company instead of attachments. A simple alias uploads a file to the web host, and I can just paste in a URL.<p>Dreamhost gives so much space that I just leave stuff up there and almost never remove it, so the link stays good; and since it's my own domain name, it will remain good even if I change hosts.<p>I guess Drop Box and Google Drive are the modern equivalents, but my URLs are nice and simple and I have complete control. Really, I'm surprised more people don't do it this way.
I built a gmail plugin several years ago that let you send arbitrarily large attachments w/ web download so you didn't have to use google drive, but had a terrible time marketing and promoting it. Now it seems like there are a lot of third party options in the space, is this really an issue given the services available?
Will GMail support binary files and password protected archives again?<p>It's pretty off-putting - instead of just sending or adding a warning message, GMail blocks such files.
Awesome. Right now the industry standard is to limit incoming mail to 25mb attachments. Once it becomes common place to accept larger sizes we can squash out these technological relics.