No, Raw files are larger and are not compressed.
Yes.
Jpeg files are smaller than bitmap files, though bitmap files are much better quality.
Any file larger than 999 bytes would have a kilobyte file size.
Word files include data about the formatting of the text (font, color, size, centered, margins, etc.). Notepad files (usually .txt) are plain text files--no formatting, just text.
Try saving as a different file type. A .jpeg file would be smaller than a .bmp file.
A USB Flash drive can be formatted with 2 different types of file system. The FAT32 file system, does not support files of a larger size than 4gb, so transferring files larger than 4gb is not possible. It is recommended to format your flash drive with the NT file system ( NTFS ) which also offers a faster access time.
If it is a jpeg file then tell her to send it in it's original file size. It can be no better than the original.
"Jpeg" and ".jpg" are the same thing. The only difference is that most people prefer to say "jpeg" rather than "dot J.P.G."
The professional version of Adobe Acrobat allows you to save as or export to a jpeg file. The free version of Acrobat Reader does not have this functionality. A work around may be to place or import the Adobe file into a word processing program and then save as or export the Word file as a jpeg. The document can also be re-scanned as a jpeg file for a third option. If the document has text I would not recommend a jpeg file for anything other than viewing on a monitor.
Files that are larger than the USB Capacity. Example: 2.3GB file on a 1GB Flash Drive cannot be copied/saved on the USB
TIFF would be used for high quality photos and print files, while JPEG would be used where file size is an issue, and quality isn't as important. JPEG and TIFF are a couple of the most common examples of lossy and lossless compression, respectively.File formats that use lossy compression throw away pieces of information as they compress the file for a compact file size. This usually isn't too much of an issue except when compression is set high, or a file is saved multiple times in a lossy format.File formats that use lossless compression manage to keep every bit of information about your picture, but use clever algorithms to compress where possible (for instance, a large area of white could be noted as such, rather than a vast array of white pixels). Even compressed lossless files are much larger than lossy ones.It boils down to quantity versus quality.