How many MB/GB? Can you instruct your recipients to receive the photos within a certain period of time?
A free http download service like yousendit.com or similar will work for files up to 1 GB, I believe (zip/rar your photos), or you could set up a little FTP server for this purpose. At any rate, if you’re going to make a torrent, you’ll have to be online to seed it anyway, so you might as well just set up a temporary server, unless you have a lot of friends who know how to configure their routers/NAT/firewall. Sounds impractical and probably won’t work.
Don’t these questions “disappear” mysteriously, when “caught”? The SDMB corporation and its administrators aren’t friendly to discussion of these newer technologies, regardless of how innocent their uses may be in practice.
You can get a program to make your computer a server, then those who you wish to send the files to could download them via FTP, keeping the folder structure intact. I recommend Serv-U for the program that’ll make your computer a server, and SmartFTP is a good FTP program. A google of Serv-U show that it’s free for personal use, and if I recall correctly, Smart FTP is free for home use as well.
Together it’s a handy way to send large files over the interent, while also maintaining your privacy.
I don’t see P2P as a good solution for this, I think a better one is to upload the pictures to a photo web site. I like photos.yahoo.com, they give unlimited free space.
I’ve made a few files that was about 6 GB total if I recall. I found the best way to share it with a far distant friend was to create a torrent of it. No coordination involved. I just ran the program and sent him the torrent. Since I’m always on he just ran it when he could then e-mailed me a few days later when he got it all.
If there was only one person trying to get the file(s), bittorrent is kind of a waste (unless it’s easier to set up than an FTP server). The real advantage of bittorrent is when there’s many people trying to get one or few files at the same time.
I 2nd the temporary FTP idea. Most web browsers will connect to ftp servers so you could easily setup a FTP server and host your files there, then give out the address to your family/friends and tell them to use their browser to dowload the files. Of course this won’t be a good idea if you have dial-up.
How many recipients are there? And how often will they need to get the photos? If it’s a one-off event with only a few recipients, I’d suggest burning a CD or DVD and mailing it. I’d check with your ISP before running any server type software - your ISP may block the ports. Indeed, if you speak to them very nicely, they may temporarily give you or only make a modest charge for webspace to accommodate it.
If you do put the photos on a publicly available server, do put them in password protected archives with decently strong encryption.
It’s also fairly easy to change the port your FTP server is on, if the default port is blocked. Of course, running an FTP server in general might be against the terms you agreed to when signed up for the service, and probably is if the port is being blocked.
I don’t know about SmartFTP (it may be client-only, so you cannot be a server), but I can recommend FileZilla http://filezilla.sourceforge.net/
Goofy name, but it’s worked well for me, at least as a server.