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Thursday, 23 January 2014
Send large files: 10 of the best services for sharing big files
Roundup Here are ten of our favourite services to share files too big for email
The kinds of documents we generate have outpaced the means to cope
for some technologies. Pop back in time to the 1990s and you might have
sent the odd Word document or image to a colleague. Maybe a decade ago
you'd have fired the occasional MP3 someone's way (of your own recorded
material, naturally).
Today though, even fairly basic
documents might include many embedded images, taking them into the
dozens of megabytes. And then there are movies, layered Photoshop
documents, audio work files, and more.
Although there's no set
maximum assigned globally regarding email, you'll often find providers,
services and corporate servers bounce anything that's too big as a
matter of course. 10MB is a fairly typical limit, which once would have
seemed a staggering amount of data, but today doesn't exactly seem huge.
On that basis, you'll often find yourself needing to send
something to a friend or colleague, and realising email just won't cut
it.
For very specific types of files, you might resort to joining
an appropriate service and sharing your work, at least if you often want
to send it on to others, such as YouTube or Soundcloud.
Often,
though, you just want to send a massive file on an ad-hoc basis.
Fortunately, dozens of options exist, from cloud storage providers to
one-to-one upload services. Here are some of the best…
1. Dropbox
Dropbox
is so popular that we're wondering if people might soon refer to
'Dropboxing' for file-sharing/online storage in the same generic manner
as 'Photoshopping' for image editing. You get 2GB for free and can share
folders or links to specific files, such as archives. You can buy extra
space, from $9.99 monthly for 100GB. Dropbox's widespread support (in
terms of first-party and third-party apps) adds to its appeal.
2. Box
Box
echoes Dropbox in terms of sharing functionality, although its free
option provides a whopping 10GB of storage. The caveat is 250MB
file-size limits, which can be eradicated by paying. Paid plans also
provide collaboration options (including email notification regarding
downloads and commenting on files), but the free option's great for
secure ad-hoc sharing.
3. SugarSync
SugarSync is in some ways similar to Dropbox, although it enables you to back-up any
folder to the cloud. From a sharing standpoint there are no size
limitations beyond your account's size (60GB for the cheapest $7.49 per
month option), and there are tools available for group collaboration and
businesses.
4. MediaFire
One of the more mature entries in terms of collaboration, MediaFire
gives you 10GB of space for free, limiting transfers to 200MB. Paying
$2.49 per month adds long-term storage, makes sharing ad-free, and gives
you a FileDrop uploader for people to send content to your account.
Document editing is also available.
5. WeTransfer
We like WeTransfer
a lot. The free version is ad-supported and gives you registration-free
2GB transfers as often as you like. Each upload stays live for seven
days. But buy Plus (€120 annually) and you get 5GB optionally
password-protected transfers, and 50GB of long-term storage. The
company's breezy copywriting doesn't hurt either.
6. Hightail
Originally YouSendIt, Hightail
was one of the first companies that latched on to the 'fire huge files
across the internet' thing, and it's grown rapidly since being founded
in 2004. The free 'lite' plan - 50MB transfers, 2GB storage - looks a
touch limited these days, but the company's longevity is reassuring, and
its enterprise options will appeal to corporates.
7. Adobe SendNow
If
you're in the design industry, large files are a big part of life.
Massive high-res images, audio, video, magazine PDFs, the works. Adobe
offers SendNow
for £14.65/$19.95 annually, and beyond straightforward sending, you
also get file-tracking and a handy 'convert to PDF' option for your
money.
8. Egnyte
Most services for sending large documents are aimed at the widest possible market, but Egnyte
has concentrated on the enterprise. Security, back-up, granular
permissions and speed are central to the service, which starts at $8 per
employee per month for between five and 24 employees. This plan
includes 1TB of storage and comes with a 2.5GB maximum file size.
9. MailBigFile
If we're honest, it was the name that first attracted us to this British company. That said, the usability of MailBigFile
is also great, with a bold drop-well and handy time/upload indicators.
Up to five files totalling 2GB can be sent for free, while pro accounts
(£2.99 per month) up the limit to 4GB, speed up transfers, add storage
and offer tracking.
10. Mega
Founded by Kim Dotcom of Megaupload fame, Mega
reportedly amassed 100,000 users within its first hour live. Despite
initial issues with reliability and speed, the service remained popular,
in part due to content encryption happening client-side. 50GB of
storage is yours for free, while pro accounts start at €9.99 per month
for 500GB of storage and 1TB of bandwidth.
Bonus 11. Your local postal service
If
you've a colossal amount of data you want to send to someone and a not
entirely speedy web connection (or are a touch paranoid regarding
government services and web interception), copy it to a USB stick and
pop it in the post. With especially large files, even a couple of days
via the likes of Royal Mail might work out quicker than uploading.
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