Sunday, June 8, 2003
Email Processing with SpreadMsg Lite 5.14
Posted by Jason Dunn in "SOFTWARE" @ 05:00 PM
"SpreadMsg Lite is the FREE version of Compuquest, Inc's award-winning SpreadMsg software. It provides automated rule-based messaging to alpha pagers, digital cellular and GSM phones, PDA's, or email. The Lite version features an Email scanning agent that searches the user's email waiting at their ISP, examining it for user-specified content, for mail from a specific person, for mail containing specific words in the "subject", etc. If the user rules are satisfied, the wireless (or email) message is created and delivered. Also provided is a sampling of other SpreadMsg software features available in the other registered versions of the software.
In those features, Message Data is captured in real time from computer files, internet pages, spreadsheet data, other applications running on the user's PC, or live streaming financial data containing stock, option, index, futures, and currency data from the Quote.Com QFeed datafeed. Again, user rules and filters are applied, and Sprea! dMsg turns the captured data into e-mail or wireless messages. You can trigger message delivery based on rules such as any change in data value, data above or below a specific numeric level or range, textual content match, periodic time interval, and more."
The user-interface makes me a little queasy, but it's a freeware application and might be very useful for some of you.
In those features, Message Data is captured in real time from computer files, internet pages, spreadsheet data, other applications running on the user's PC, or live streaming financial data containing stock, option, index, futures, and currency data from the Quote.Com QFeed datafeed. Again, user rules and filters are applied, and Sprea! dMsg turns the captured data into e-mail or wireless messages. You can trigger message delivery based on rules such as any change in data value, data above or below a specific numeric level or range, textual content match, periodic time interval, and more."
The user-interface makes me a little queasy, but it's a freeware application and might be very useful for some of you.