Not exact matches
For example, prevent employees from working
too much by shutting off access to the
email server at 5 p.m. Companies such as Volkswagen have implemented a such a rule.
Basically this means you'll spend your time and money trying to make a difference, sending tons of
email, but within seconds, the
email server filters it out because you didn't send it properly —
too much
too quickly, not from a trusted source (using things like aweber or constant contact services help here), etc..
I will have a new
email server,
too.
Book files can often be
too big for
email servers to handle.
About twelve hours later, a comment linking to the same file but located on a Russian FTP
server was posted to WattsUpWithThat.com stating «We feel that climate science is, in the current situation,
too important to be kept under wraps» and listing a «sample» of 19
email file names and snippets.
Unfortunately,
too many law firms sacrifice deliverability on the altar of savings (i.e., pennywise, pound foolish) by using cheap
email blast services that attract hordes of small businesses (and some «bad guys»
too) who don't follow best practices and hurt the reputation of all the other companies using the same mail
server IP addresses.
You may adhere to «best practices,» but if their
emails generate
too many complaints, your own reputation (and the deliverability of your
emails) will be adversely affected (because you're all sharing an IP address, which mail
servers examine when determining whether to deliver an
email).
Your
email goes from
server to
server to
server, potentially all over the world even if the sender and recipient of the
email are not
too far from each other in the same country, by a route that only the most sophisticated techies can even determine, and spends time in all of the unknown
servers it crosses through en route.
It's not even as simple as looking at the maximum attachment size of the service you use and the service you're
emailing —
emails often travel over several mail transfer agents when they're sent, so you may have your attachment rejected by a
server along the way if you attach
too much data.
Email can be rejected by servers when attachments are too large, and even if a large email makes it to your recipient, the recipient might not be happy for having big attachment in their mai
Email can be rejected by
servers when attachments are
too large, and even if a large
email makes it to your recipient, the recipient might not be happy for having big attachment in their mai
email makes it to your recipient, the recipient might not be happy for having big attachment in their mailbox.
Updated Mail App — Apple updated their
email app, which now addresses the problem of
too large attachments which could not be sent due to restrictions from the
email servers.
This is especially useful when you're working with a freelancer who may not have access to your company's
server or when your files are
too large to be sent via
email.