Save time and money maintaining clean mailing lists and checking the validity of recipient's e-mails addresses...
eMail Verifier can save time and money for businesses who send newsletters to their clients, nonprofit organizations who send bulletins to their members, or any person or business that needs to maintain a clean e-mail contact list.
eMail Verifier has proven helpful to us. We have more than 7,400 e-mail addresses for our members, and they don't always tell us when they change addresses. eMail Verifier also catches obvious typos, and it does it a lot faster than I can scan a list of e-mail addresses. eMail Verifier may not be for everyone, but it works for us, and really cuts down on the number of bounced messages when we send out notifications to our members. – Greg Raven
To understand why ACP exists, you need to understand the HAS (Hardware Abstraction Layer) shift. Before Android 9 (Pie), audio mods like Viper4Android worked beautifully by hooking directly into the audio HAL. But with Project Treble and the move to Stable HALs (especially with Android 10, 11, and beyond), Google locked down audio routing.
Modern Android devices use one of two audio "effects" architectures:
The result? You install Viper4Android. It says "Processing: No." Your convolver is dead. Your bass boost is a ghost. This happens because the audio server is simply not looking at the paths your mod expects. ACP was built to bridge that gap.
This is the module's party trick. On devices with HAS (Pixel, OnePlus, Xiaomi with A10+), ACP can downgrade the relevant audio configuration to a legacy-style structure, tricking the system into loading mods normally reserved for older Android versions.
In the context of Magisk, an Audio Compatibility Patch is a module designed to bridge the gap between your system’s hardware and third-party audio software.
A "full" compatibility patch typically does the following:
The module replaces or overlays critical audio configuration files at runtime:
It injects a small service acp_daemon that monitors audio server crashes and restores routing without reboot.
To understand why ACP exists, you need to understand the HAS (Hardware Abstraction Layer) shift. Before Android 9 (Pie), audio mods like Viper4Android worked beautifully by hooking directly into the audio HAL. But with Project Treble and the move to Stable HALs (especially with Android 10, 11, and beyond), Google locked down audio routing.
Modern Android devices use one of two audio "effects" architectures:
The result? You install Viper4Android. It says "Processing: No." Your convolver is dead. Your bass boost is a ghost. This happens because the audio server is simply not looking at the paths your mod expects. ACP was built to bridge that gap.
This is the module's party trick. On devices with HAS (Pixel, OnePlus, Xiaomi with A10+), ACP can downgrade the relevant audio configuration to a legacy-style structure, tricking the system into loading mods normally reserved for older Android versions.
In the context of Magisk, an Audio Compatibility Patch is a module designed to bridge the gap between your system’s hardware and third-party audio software.
A "full" compatibility patch typically does the following:
The module replaces or overlays critical audio configuration files at runtime:
It injects a small service acp_daemon that monitors audio server crashes and restores routing without reboot.
MaxBulk Mailer is a bulk mailer and e-mailmerge tool for macOS and Windows that allows you to send out customized press releases, price lists or any kind of text or HTML messages to your customers.
eMail extractor is a tool for extracting e-mail addresses from all kind of sources like your local files, web pages or the clipboard in order to create highly targeted and legitimate bulk e-mail lists.
eMail Bounce Handler is a bounce e-mail filtering and handling tool that recognizes bounce emails, electronic mail that is returned to the sender because it cannot be delivered for some reason.