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  1. #1
    The Drone
    Guest
    Guys 'n' Gals,

    My daughter has a D500 (on a Vodafone contract) and I asked her to
    e-mail me a couple of photos she'd taken with the phone on her camera. I
    told her to just enter the e-mail address in place of the mobile number.
    She said she couldn't (it came back with some message I can't remember)
    so she SMS'ed them to my SE K750i (also on a Vodafone contract) instead.
    I was then able to e-mail them to myself no problem. Was her inability
    to e-mail the photos something to do with her phone or finger trouble?
    Could it be something to do with Vodafone? I'd be surprised as both
    contracts were taken out at similar times.

    When they arrived on my phone, they "played" for several seconds as
    though movies. When they got to my computer, they were .jpg stills. Can
    anyone explain this?

    Finally, they looked rather grainy on the computer, is that normal for a
    D500?

    Thanks,
    --
    Peter



    See More: e-mail photos from Samsung D500




  2. #2
    Netty
    Guest

    Re: e-mail photos from Samsung D500


    "The Drone" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > Guys 'n' Gals,
    >
    > My daughter has a D500 (on a Vodafone contract) and I asked her to e-mail
    > me a couple of photos she'd taken with the phone on her camera. I told her
    > to just enter the e-mail address in place of the mobile number. She said
    > she couldn't (it came back with some message I can't remember) so she
    > SMS'ed them to my SE K750i (also on a Vodafone contract) instead. I was
    > then able to e-mail them to myself no problem. Was her inability to e-mail
    > the photos something to do with her phone or finger trouble? Could it be
    > something to do with Vodafone? I'd be surprised as both contracts were
    > taken out at similar times.
    >
    > When they arrived on my phone, they "played" for several seconds as though
    > movies. When they got to my computer, they were .jpg stills. Can anyone
    > explain this?
    >
    > Finally, they looked rather grainy on the computer, is that normal for a
    > D500?
    >
    > Thanks,
    > --
    > Peter


    It sounds like your daughter hasn't set up her phone for emailing. If she
    has access to a pc she could go to the vodafone website and have a look on
    there as to how she does this. (I couldn't tell you how to do this manually
    as I've not set mine up either.)

    As to the photos, she may have her phone set up to take pics at a low
    resolution. The D500 has 6 different resolutions. She should consult her
    manual as to how she can change it.

    Netty





  3. #3
    Jon
    Guest

    Re: e-mail photos from Samsung D500

    [email protected] declared for all the world to hear...
    > My daughter has a D500 (on a Vodafone contract) and I asked her to
    > e-mail me a couple of photos she'd taken with the phone on her camera. I
    > told her to just enter the e-mail address in place of the mobile number.
    > She said she couldn't (it came back with some message I can't remember)
    > so she SMS'ed them to my SE K750i (also on a Vodafone contract) instead.


    I don't think she did actually. MMS'd maybe?

    > I was then able to e-mail them to myself no problem. Was her inability
    > to e-mail the photos something to do with her phone or finger trouble?


    She was almost certainly attempting to send the photo as an email
    attachment, rather than send them as *an MMS addressed to an email
    address*. Sending the photos as email attachments would be possible if
    she had an email account correctly configured on the D500.

    > When they arrived on my phone, they "played" for several seconds as
    > though movies. When they got to my computer, they were .jpg stills. Can
    > anyone explain this?


    Yes, MMS messages are rather like a slideshow. Each picture has a given
    length of time before ending the message or moving on the next frame.
    The default time on many handsets is 5 seconds.

    > Finally, they looked rather grainy on the computer, is that normal for a
    > D500?


    It is if the lens is scratched or covered in crap, which is not unusual
    for a mobile phone.
    --
    Regards
    Jon



  4. #4
    The Drone
    Guest

    Re: e-mail photos from Samsung D500

    In article <[email protected]>, Jon
    <[email protected]> writes
    >[email protected] declared for all the world to hear...
    >> My daughter has a D500 (on a Vodafone contract) and I asked her to
    >> e-mail me a couple of photos she'd taken with the phone on her camera. I
    >> told her to just enter the e-mail address in place of the mobile number.
    >> She said she couldn't (it came back with some message I can't remember)
    >> so she SMS'ed them to my SE K750i (also on a Vodafone contract) instead.


    >I don't think she did actually. MMS'd maybe?


    Er, yes ... OK. The interface is the same so I'm afraid I just called it
    the same ...

    >> I was then able to e-mail them to myself no problem. Was her inability
    >> to e-mail the photos something to do with her phone or finger trouble?


    >She was almost certainly attempting to send the photo as an email
    >attachment, rather than send them as *an MMS addressed to an email
    >address*. Sending the photos as email attachments would be possible if
    >she had an email account correctly configured on the D500.

    You may be right - but I did tell her just to enter the e-mail address
    instead of a phone number. perhaps she disobeyed me (!) and you are
    right!

    >> When they arrived on my phone, they "played" for several seconds as
    >> though movies. When they got to my computer, they were .jpg stills. Can
    >> anyone explain this?


    >Yes, MMS messages are rather like a slideshow. Each picture has a given
    >length of time before ending the message or moving on the next frame.
    >The default time on many handsets is 5 seconds.

    That would tally.

    >> Finally, they looked rather grainy on the computer, is that normal for a
    >> D500?


    >It is if the lens is scratched or covered in crap, which is not unusual
    >for a mobile phone.

    Hmm, maybe. I will tell her to dust it off! But I think the may be
    covered by the slide action? Maybe not. I'll ask her.

    Thanks for the pointers.
    --
    Peter



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