If it serves a business need and e-mail is the easiest method for achieving that goal, barring other limitations it seems just fine to me. When I worked for $vsc it was not uncommon to receive a mail message from a customer which contained an attachment of 100MB or more.
Given that AOL doesn't support attachments over ~=3MB, the "barring other limitations" clause does seem to come into play in this particular instance. -----Original Message----- From: Martin Blackstone To: Exchange Discussions Sent: 12/18/2001 5:40 PM Subject: RE: 552 Exceeded Local Data Allocation Limit A 14MB file shouldn't be emailed. It should be FTP'd or put on a web site with a link. I would be pissed if people were pumping files that size to my users. One time, sure, constant, no way. -----Original Message----- From: Mark Peoples [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2001 2:22 PM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: 552 Exceeded Local Data Allocation Limit How much space is available at the aol address for e-mails? Is presume it is NOT unrestricted... Can you send through smaller attachments to the same or different addresses? Are you able to break up the attachment into files that are small enough to not warrant ftp'ing them? (hint) MP -----Original Message----- From: Robert V [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, 19 December 2001 9:12 AM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: 552 Exceeded Local Data Allocation Limit I would have never guessed...;) Thank you for enlightening me! ;) _________________________________________________________________ List posting FAQ: http://www.swinc.com/resource/exch_faq.htm Archives: http://www.swynk.com/sitesearch/search.asp To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Exchange List admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED]