SendLater 2.11
| Developer: |
4Team Corporation (more products...) |
| OS: | Win98/ME/NT 4.x/XP/2000/2003/ Vista Starter/ Vista Home Basic/ Vista Home Premium/ Vista Business/ Vista Enterprise/ Vista Ultimate/ Vista Home Basic x64/ Vista Home Premium x64/ Vista Business x64/ V |
| License: | Shareware |
| Price: |
$24.95 (Buy it now)
|
| Size: | 3.70 MB |
| Rating: | Rate this program: |
|
|
|
SendLater is a convenient e-mail scheduler allowing you to handle your e-mail correspondence in a timely manner even if you are away from your computer. Your computer will never forget to send an important business or personal message. Prepare all your email notifications and reminders, greetings in advance and schedule requrrence their delivery. As long as your computer is online, your e-mail will be sent automatically even Outlook is not running. The program is easy to install and easy to handle. Each time you reply or create a new e-mail message, you will be able to choose a particular time and recurrence for your PC to send your message. Just click the "SendLater" icon on the toolbar and select the sending time using time-and-date/recurrence selector. Click "Send later" and your message will be scheduled for that time/recurrence and saved in the "Send Later" folder. Be sure that it will be sent exactly at the time and recurrence of your choice. And at any time, you can open the "Send Later" folder and edit, remove or send your messages manually. You can specify the bulk of e-mails and the time interval for the split e-mail sending. "Send Now" feature now allows you to send e-mails from the Internet pages "mailto:" links, Office or other programs right away, without opening Outlook.
The "Grab File" feature for attachments: automatically "grabs" the last-modified document from you specified location. The "Ignore file" list and "Ignore hidden and system files" feature: allows for ignoring the unwanted files to be "grabbed".
SendLater examples of use:
- No more reminders needed. Schedule repetitive emails at daily, weekly, monthly or even yearly intervals.
- Monthly billing notifications
- direct marketing letters and reports
- routine company meetings reminders
- never miss birthdays, anniversaries, and holiday greetings and etc. |
|
|
Latest news:
Python update makes break with past (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 08:40:34 -0800)
Python 3.0 is a major change from the Python 2 series, and the first release that is intentionally backwards-incompatible. Python developers on Wednesday released the final version of Python 3.0, a major reworking of the programming language that is incompatible with the Python 2 series. Python...
The weirdest computing disasters of 2008 (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 05:12:55 -0800)
Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters. Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters. The top 10...
Roadmap: Open source to take over mainstream IT (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 12:46:14 -0800)
Open source-based IT jobs will grow and the cloud will be ubiquitous, as long as the community takes certain steps, according to a roadmap from the Open World Forum. Within the next 12 years, 40 percent of IT jobs will be related to open source, and open-source-based cloud computing...
Oracle adds data-integrity code to Linux kernel (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 08:00:52 -0800)
The enterprise-software company has collaborated with networking-hardware company Emulex to produce Linux kernel data-integrity code. Oracle has announced that it has contributed data-integrity code to the Linux kernel. The open-source code, which has been accepted into the Linux 2.6.27 kernel, is designed to reduce data corruption...
40 percent of IT jobs will be in open source, study (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 05:45:01 -0800)
By 2020, the cloud will have taken over, and open source will rule in the cloud - with the result that 40 percent of IT jobs will be related to open source, according to a report. By 2020, the cloud will have taken over, and open source will rule...
|
|
|