This can lead to slower delivery of emails. This is because sending larger files through email is not only unsafe, but it can take up unnecessary server space. For the time being, you can only send files up to 25MB. There’s also a catch to Google’s new update: you can only receive files up to 50MB on Gmail, you can’t send files up to 50MB.
If you’re worried that you may have large or useless files cluttering your device, click above to activate Quick Cleanup to free up memory on your phone.
Downloading many large attachments through Gmail and then leaving them on your phone even when you are finished with them will cause your device to drag. Always be aware of how much space large files may be taking up on your devices, though. But if you want that option to receive larger files, you no longer have to worry. Now that Dropbox and other file-sharing sites exist, it is undesirable to send a larger file through mail. Now, Gmail users can receive up to 50MB of files - a serious increase that will allow users to receive higher quality photos, large PDFs, and more music files, among others.
Previously, Gmail users could only receive a file or series of files that totaled less than 25MB. Google recently announced that it is increasing its file-sharing limit on Gmail. Worry no more - you no longer have to fear not receiving an email because the file size was too large.