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Pando: A Better Way to Send Large Email Attachments
Benjamin J. Higginbotham
E-mail is an interesting creature.  Originally designed for text only this beast has grown out of control with users spoofing names, attachments in excess of 10MB and just plain abuse of the system.  I have long believed that there are two areas where e-mail needs the greatest improvement:  file attachments and user authentication.  I can?「どィび「t fix user authentication today, but a product called Pando can fix the problems with attachments.

E-mail servers like to have text messages sent back and forth.  As soon as a user sends a 10MB file, an image for example, it bogs down the servers on both ends, increases the size of the message storage and slows the process of getting new messages for the recipient as their system tries to download the massive attachment.  The solution is to split the message into two parts.  When I compose a message that has a 10MB file attached to it and hit send, the text part goes to the e-mail server while the attachment goes to a file server.  The recipient would not see a file in the message like they do today, rather they would see a link to the file just like a link to a web site.  By splitting the message into two parts the E-mail server does not need to store and process a huge file and the recipient does not have to download a massive file to get the rest of their messages.  This is the best case solution.  It?「どィび「s transparent to both the sender and recipient.  No special e-mail program is used, the e-mail client knows how to split the messages and where to send each, and so it just works.

I don?「どィび「t know how to get that best case scenario today, but Pando.com gets us really close.  Install the Pando client on your Windows based PC or Macintosh, and using the client you can send a message with up to a 1000MB attachment (that?「どィび「s 1GB).  The attachment will go to their file server while the message will simply have the link to the file.  This is fantastic.  What Pando does not do today is integrate directly into my Outlook, Outlook Express, Thunderbird or Mail.app applications from the sender side but it does look like they are working on getting direct Outlook support soon.  Unfortunately this service requires the recipient to also have Pando installed.  I believe the solution would be much more powerful if Pando simply embedded a link into the message without requiring any special software.  A simple web browser would be a great tool to download.  Pando gets us close, but not all the way to the grand attachment vision above.  The reason that Pando requires a special app on the receiving end is that the whole system uses a P2P type model. The advantage of this is that the recipient can start downloading the file before the sender is done uploading, making the time required in the whole process much smaller than it could be.  The other advantage is that bandwidth can be shared between the sender and receiving party.  This helps keep costs low if not free.  I would like to see a system where rather than placing a .pando file in the recipients e-mail, it's a hyperlink that the recipient can click on.  This link would open a page that would try and detect a Pando install.  If Pando is installed the download would start right away.  If Pando is not installed the file would download right in the browser.  If the file was not done uploading then the user would have the option to wait for the file or to download Pando to start the x-fer right away.
Pando_Screenshot.jpg  
By using Pando today I?「どィび「m able to get 1/2 way to my vision of splitting the message from the attachment.  Hopefully soon they will have their Outlook plugin which will make the process almost transparent to both sides.  I would really like to seea Thunderbird, Outlook Express and Mail.app plugin as well.  It would also be nice if Pando sold server software that an IT department could install on a box next to their mail server.  This would allow users inside the building to take advantage of the service without having to use external bandwidth and it should be a lot faster.

For now Pando is in beta but I have found that it works great.  If you?「どィび「re constantly sending messages with large attachments (anything over 1MB in my opinion), do your IT team or E-mail admin a favor... Download and try Pando.  They will thank you for it!



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Comments

1. Posted by: Ajay Data on July 23, 2006 2:54 AM:

better than pandoo , the more better and advanced email system is offered by xgen plus from India. They have introduced a system of Virtual storage with in your webmail and in which u can upload any file u want. The size limitation will depend on your account size, so if u have 2 gb account, u can upload a 2 gb file. After uploading you can send the link of that file just with a single click to as many people as you want. They call this as Smart Attachment. Its very cool indeed. The comapny website is www.datainfocom.in , DATA INFOCOM LIMITED.




2. Posted by: Ed Kohler on July 26, 2006 12:45 AM:

Products like this are great, but have to become easier to use (integrated into mail clients) to make a real difference. That could help avoid the dreaded massive attachment issue caused by people sending too many photos.




3. Posted by: Amhed Aman on August 2, 2006 10:34 PM:

It sounds too good to be true. I want to know how Pando makes mone. Who knows what they're actually installing on my computer, and the data they're tracking.




4. Posted by: Michael on August 8, 2006 6:30 PM:

I would also recommend giving Dliveo a try, it works in a simliar way but uses it's own servers for the transfer to happen, so no bittorrent and no 'sharing' of files with others once you have downloaded it.

No limits on file size sending either




5. Posted by: Olav Schettler on August 17, 2006 4:48 AM:

Another such service is http://dropster.org . This one does not require software installation, has open APIs and allows you to use your own (sub-)domain for hosted files.




6. Posted by: Dag Frode Aasnes on August 17, 2006 7:44 AM:

FrontOffice in Norway have created the perfect large e-mail system . Same result as the other (Receiver gets an e-mail with links , no attachment).

BUT here is the difference YOU USE YOUR ORDINARY E-MAIL CLIENT , no installation no addons.. just send with ordinary SMTP..

Link to Info Page

(sorry still in norwegian ) but you can get the idea




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