Smallpotatoes
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2002
- Messages
- 14,976
This summer I've received more courtesy photos than ever. Usually, I'm able to publish them, but it seems like more and more frequently, when I try to open the jpeg file to process it in Photo Editor, I'm unable to open the file and see a message that says "image too large (too many bytes)."
It used to be I'd get one of those every once in a while, but this summer, I've had at least one such photo each week. I replied to one person, asking them to send me a smaller photo. They didn't know what to do and I didn't either.
Is this happening more often because the computers we have at work aren't new enough, because I don't know what I'm doing or because the people sending these photos don't know what they're doing?
Also, when a reader submits something in an attachment you can't open (and yes, I do have a written policy in the paper each week about what kind of attachments we can accept. With jpegs, the problem is usually the opposite, the images are too small), to what length should you be willing to go to make sure what they sent you gets in the paper?
It used to be I'd get one of those every once in a while, but this summer, I've had at least one such photo each week. I replied to one person, asking them to send me a smaller photo. They didn't know what to do and I didn't either.
Is this happening more often because the computers we have at work aren't new enough, because I don't know what I'm doing or because the people sending these photos don't know what they're doing?
Also, when a reader submits something in an attachment you can't open (and yes, I do have a written policy in the paper each week about what kind of attachments we can accept. With jpegs, the problem is usually the opposite, the images are too small), to what length should you be willing to go to make sure what they sent you gets in the paper?