J Street anyClient Announced
|
InnoVal Systems Solutions
announced that it will release "J
Street anyClient" in August. Written completely
in Java, anyClient provides significant new function for almost anyone who uses
a POP3 client for Internet email.
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J Street anyClient is designed to work with MR2/Ice, PMMail for OS/2, PMMail for
Windows, Post Road Mailer, Netscape, Ultimail Lite, Eudora, Eudora Pro, Outlook,
Pine, J Street Mailer and most other POP3 email clients.
J Street anyClient provides the following useful services for anyone who uses
email:
1) automatic time-interval and manual mail retrieval from one or more email accounts
to a local queue. Mail can be read into a mail client at local disk speeds. Internet
connection is not needed when retrieving email to your client email program if
the mail has already been retrieved from your accounts' email servers and placed
in the
queue. The mail client does need to be running for mail retrieval to local queues.
2) many-to-one and one-to-many email mapping. At the simplest level you can map
messages from multiple accounts into a single client-side account. With filters,
you can move email from one account to another client-side account. Customers with
virtual domains can divide email addressed to numerous people, when collected under
a single virtual pop account. Users who participate in mailing lists can create
client-side accounts for each mailing list.
3) list and peek at email on a POP3 or an IMAP4 server. Email can be selectively
read without downloading, downloaded for your mail client, or deleted. Being able
to delete mail without downloading is particularly useful for removing obvious
spams and getting rid of "stuck" messages. Reading messages while leaving
them on a POP3 or
IMAP4 server is also useful for checking office mail from home or while away from
your primary email client machine.
4) detail or summary retrieval logs showing you when your email was retrieved
from one or more accounts. Logs also show failed attempts due to timeouts and down
conditions.
5) advanced filters may be used to move or copy email between client-side accounts,
to send automatic replies, to forward email to another email address, to notify
an email address that a message has been received (useful for email-enabled pagers
and cell phones), to trap spam, to alert you through audio sounds that a critical
or watched-for email has arrived, and to isolate web-generated forms from email
clients into separate directories for separate processing. Six types of filters
are supported:
- String argument filters
- List filters - Banned domain filters (a client or server-based file may be used)
- Banned phrases and words filter (e.g. "BULK EMAIL WORKS") - Setable
spam rules filters such as no To-header or high percent of uppercase characters
- "Write-your-own" filter classes in Java.
People with a rudimentary knowledge of Java may create filter classes. These work
with a series of preset variables (e.g. from, subject, body, etc.) so that no file
reading or writing is necessary. A sample script is provided along with instructions
for implementing
your own filters.
6) IMAP4 to POP3 conversion in J Street anyClient allows users to access IMAP4
accounts as though they were POP3. J Street anyClient is especially useful for
people using POP3-only email clients who need to access IMAP4 servers that do not
accept POP3 commands.
J Street anyClient is expected to have an introductory price of $20.00 when it
is released. Significant academic, site, and volume discounts will be available.
Java 1.1 for OS/2, Windows 95/98/NT, Solaris, Linux, AIX, etc. is required to run
anyClient.
For additional information about InnoVal and InnoVal products,
please
write to innoval@ibm.net, call 914-835-3838,
or see
@Macarlo, Inc.
@Macarlo's Shareware & Web
OS/2
Java Lobby Member
Java Site Accredited
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