*/
Want to see what people are talking about? See the latest forum posts.
*/

Smtp.NET 3.0.5

*/

Smtp.NET 3.0.5

Submitted By: thodgson
Rating: (Not rated) (Rate It)

Professional Email Component for ASP.NET and .NET Windows Forms which doesn't extend the System.Web.Mail namespace but was built from the ground up to go further and offer you more. Smtp.NET was designed to be the easiest .NET email component to learn and use, unlike competitors that require you to learn their object model simply to send an email.
Features HTML Email with automatic image embedding, authentication, automatic ZIP compression of attachments, support for message queuing on IIS & emailQ.NET, mail merge, multiple attachments, multiple recipients, specify multiple servers for failover and redundancy, and more. Smtp.NET is installed in the GAC (Global Assembly Cache) for easy access by all of your developers. Smtp.NET is feature rich and offers functionality that the System.Web.Mail.SmtpMail class cannot.
Fully supported and documented with extensive examples to jump-start your application development.
Royalty-free redistribution licenses, site-wide licenses, and multiple user discounts are available.


File Details
NOTE: Some downloads must be obtained through publishers´s site.
Do you want to get your software listed on this site? Go to our submissions area.

Screenshot


Details

File Name:
Smtp3.zip
Product homepage:
Order page:
Languages:
Unknown
Platforms:
Unknown
Release date:
10/8/2004
License:
Unknown
Size:
1 MB
Price/Fee (US$):
99.95 $
Number of downloads:
349

Comments (0)


Add Your Rating

(Not published)
star
starstar
starstarstar
starstarstarstar
starstarstarstarstar

corner
© 1996-2008 CommunityHeaven LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part, in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.
Violators of this policy may be subject to legal action. Please read our Terms Of Use and Privacy Statement for more information.
North American business development: Nicolai Wadstrom. Publisher: Lars Hagelin.