The amount of data used to receive an email can vary widely depending on the content of the email. A simple text email may use around 1-2 KB, while emails with attachments, images, or rich formatting can range from a few hundred KB to several MB. On average, a typical email with some formatting and a small attachment might use about 100-300 KB. Therefore, the total MB usage for receiving emails will depend on the number and size of the emails received.
i think two
The receiver's email may not accept attachments of 20 megabytes. It would be better if the sender posts the file online and then sends the receiver an email giving them a link. The website, http://www.yousendit.com/, can do just that for files up to 100 megabytes for free.
Technically, there is. It's called forwarding. When you receive an email, the icon is a little arrow pointing right. It's now an editable email message. You can add anything under 25 MB, text, and emoticons. Type an address and click send.
it depends on your isp i.e internet service provider...
You can usually send up to about 10 MB but it can vary depending on who your service provider is and which service provider you are sending it to.
It basically depends on the size of the email itself. Especially if it is a multimedia message.
In most email's, you are unable to send over a certain amount because your email provider doesn't want you to use their bandwidth. There are many other ways to send information over a network such as a file-sharing website.
yes, skype is a live voice over ip streaming application. The longer you have an active call the more mb are used. An email is usually small, about 20kb(if no images are added). Install a bandwith monitor application to monitor the amount of mb you use.
If you use smartphone, than it is no way enough. I recommend you to choose a data plan with at least 500mb. But for an ordinary phone, it is enough assuming you only use email, ym/text chatting, email, and text browsing.
mb@yahoo.com
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