Gmail has changed its attachment capacity policy and can now receive files up to 50MB.
One of the usual ones problems of emails is sending large file attachments. Until now, anyone who wanted to send an attachment larger than 25MB had to either cut it into comeyea or to turn to third-party services, such as wetransfer etc.
MB limits have grown from yesterday as well as Google he raised the bar for his bills gmail, which can now receive files up to 50 megs. It remains the limitation that you can not send Gmail attachments larger than 25MB, but you can now upload large 50MB files from Google Drive etc. without any problems on the part of the recipient.
Although her movement companyIt's only a small step in file transfer, but since emails are the easiest and most direct way to communicate and share data with friends, it's still a welcome and good change in Gmails policy. Although 50MB cannot discredit file sharing services, we expect other email companies to change their respective policies in turn.
This change takes one to three days to run on all accounts starting yesterday 1 March 2017.