Photos sent by email appear too large and zoomed in, so zoomed in that it is unreadable to most users. Sometimes photos attached to emails do not get sent at all
When I send photos by email, they appear normal when I send them. But when I open the sent email from my outbox to look at it and review it, the photographs are so large and appear to be so zoomed in that they are unreadable and unusable. Probably only someone with a desktop PC would be able to view the photo comfortably. This is a fault of the Apple user interface not allowing us to zoom out the email contents. There’s no reason why a high definition photo should have to be so large, we could zoom out on it and that would be easy for Apple to fix. I have tried sending “smaller resolution“ or “smaller size“ photos or “reduced size” photos, but even when I use the medium setting, large, small, or even when I use any setting which is not the full size, the recipients say that the image is “too blurry“ and impossible to read. So it is a “catch 22” situation “between a rock and a hard place.” The emailed image looks fine to when it is sent but when opened by me or by recipients it appears too big and zoomed in so that you can’t even fit it inside your screen. But it is blurry and too low resolution to recipients when it is “sent at a reduced size.” This is a simple user issue where Apple can enable users and recipients to zoom out in the email, or just send it as a link. I have tried sending these photos as PDFs, and the recipients say that the PDF file did not attach and was not connected in the email. Whenever I tried to send photos as PDFs, and whenever I have tried to send text PDFs, and whenever I have tried to send visual PDF, the recipients that they do not receive the attachment, or that when they open the attachment, it is a blank slate with nothing in it. Since it is absolutely certain that I am sending the attachment properly, there is some problem with iPhone software, which is attaching the PDF and sending it in the email. Additionally, when I send an image from a yahoo email from my iPhone, it usually send the photo and the other people will receive email and the photo, but when I use my iCloud email, they will not receive the photo at all. In this case when I send an email with a photo from my iCloud email, the recipients sometimes do not receive the email at all, and other times they receive the email but the attached photo has disappeared and is no longer attached to or contained in in the email which I sent. once they receive the email with the photo, it is often too large and zoomed in as I have already described. There are multiple compounded interacting issues at work here. And in other circumstances, if I send too many photos on an email, for example 4 full-size photographs or more, the recipients often will not receive it and the email will not even reach their inbox, ostensibly because the amount of data in the email is too big. when I take a photograph of the size of the photograph is usually between 2.4 and 3.4 GB. The only amount I can reliably send is one photograph of 3.2 GB or less. As I have said previously here, I cannot reduce the size of the photos using medium size, small size, or any other size because when I do that, the recipients say that the image is “too blurry” and is unreadable. Apple should increase the memory capacity of its email sending infrastructure and tools and apps. Apple should enable users to “zoom out” large images. This is a issue very similar to what might be seen in Microsoft Word. You can take a high resolution photo and simply “shrink it” to fit within the document. The actual quality of the photo or the meta-data is not being changed, it’s just being formatted to smaller size of the screen and the printing parameters of the 11 x 8 paper page, or the scrolling email. I could compare this problem to attempting to watch YouTube on an iPhone 13 in which the desktop webpage has been requested, and in that case, the YouTube format does not fit the screen and is similarly too zoomed in. These are user formatting issues and other issues which I have already described, which Apple should fix. I have not made any mistakes. Truly, these issues are the fault of Apple Incorporated and of the Apple technology and of the Apple operating system; therefore Apple needs to take notice of this problem and consequently fix these issues. You can understand that all of these problems have caused me a great deal of trouble when I try to email my employer, my weekly timesheets detailing my work hours. I have lost pay as a result. I have gotten a lot of trouble at work as a result, because I have sent my weekly timesheets in, and yet Apple technology has repeatedly failed to send photos in a usable and proper way. Apple needs to resolve these issues so that working people can collect their wages.
iPhone 13