

to send exploits in your name, especially to anyone on your lists. The recipient may know you very well, but can they trust that your system &/or credentials haven't been compromised? The purpose of Lots of mal-ware & scams is to use your name etc. E-mail attachments Are one of the Prime methods of compromising systems & networks. Then assuming your e-mail made it through intact, will the recipient dare open it? They probably shouldn't. How many times have folks not received a GOTD key sent via e-mail? How many times does the company issuing the key include notice to check Spam folders etc.? With attachments the odds of passing through filtering Decrease, especially if the attachment doesn't have a.

There's always the risk your e-mail will never reach the recipient because of filtering on mail servers, their network, & their PC/laptop etc. Sending e-mail attachments nowadays *may* not be the best option. Sure you may be running security software, but if the stick masquerades as some other type of USB hardware, that stuff doesn't come into play. If it's ever been plugged into a device that you don't know personally is not compromised, it's risky. Sadly, in this day & age you can't even hand off a USB stick - unless you unwrapped its original packaging when you bought the stick new, plugging the stick in is risky. Or just share the folder or doc using one of the very many cloud services, including Google's Drive.

"Or use Google Drive and send the big file in Gmail." Well done, GOTD, and kudos to Neuxpower Solutions for such a high quality app.
Neuxpower nxpowerlite software#
Verdict: if you have need of software as specialised as this - and no, not everyone will have such a need - then today's GOTD is unmissable. I have yet to see any difference at all between the 100% original document and the file-minimized version. As for pdfs: mine tend to be two-thirds text, one-third visuals, all created by Bullzip from Word docs / docx. and that in *every* case, not just some, not just a few, not just the odd one or two that I might've struck lucky with, in every case, NXPowerLite desktop does exactly what I expect of it: enables otherwise large, Microsoft-bloated documents to transfer by email without the bloat but without quality loss. I can no more speak for other's experience than can anyone else on here but I can say that I use this software on a daily basis to send Word docs (and Word docx) as well as pdfs as email attachments. Today's software isn't, however, from Balesio (which majored in file-size minimizing way back when) but from a UK developer with equally impressive credentials. I ran Balesio Office for several years until a screw-up occurred and thereafter have only used Balesio's *outstanding* PictureMinimizer, the app I recommend to all friends and relatives to stop 'em from sending me 5Meg holiday snaps by email when I can see what I perceive to be the same image at less than half a meg thanks to Balesio. Running late here today, so this is just a quick reply to the effect that yes, I'm in 100% agreement. Optimized 517kB (Pictures are a little bit less detailed)Īnd with Winrar or 7-zip at the best: 5,683kBĪnd with Winrar or 7-zip at the best: 5,683kB Save | Cancel There is a difference, acceptable or not: your choice.
