Design your notifications in our dashboard, then integrate them into your software with a few lines of code. No other third-parties, no email HTML, no A2P registrations, no websocket management.
NotificationAPI comes with:
No NotificationAPI videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
NotificationAPI's answer:
Our happy users (developers) are those who don't want to spend weeks or a fortune to get their notification project done.
NotificationAPI's answer:
Technical managers and developers who care about their team's velocity and shipping their roadmap asap.
NotificationAPI's answer:
NotificationAPI is the fastest way to implement user notifications in your product. Some B2B SaaS products roll out all their notification requirements in a couple of days using NotificationAPI.
NotificationAPI's answer:
In 2015, I (Sahand) was the CTO of this successful VC-backed B2B SaaS company in Canada, where the notification system was both critical and problematic. Between complex infra and logic, messaging policies and regulations, and many notification items on the roadmap, nobody was happy with notifications. Not users, developers, or the non-technical team.
"There must be a 3rd-party for this," I thought, so I googled "Notification API" and found nothing. Am I missing something here? Isn't this a big enough problem? I queried Jira and found that notifications comprised 5% of our Done tasks. We had spent 5% of our WHOLE productivity on something that was already broken.
Over the next few years, as we solved each of these challenges, we learned about all sorts of bottlenecks and pain points, realizing the need for a developer tool to solve user notifications for developers.
After successfully exiting that company, we officially started NotificationAPI as an independent company in 2020.
NotificationAPI's answer:
Based on our record, MIT App Inventor seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 41 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
App Inventor - Create powerful Android apps without code using blocs coding. - Source: dev.to / 10 months ago
First thought, play with MIT App Inventor https://appinventor.mit.edu/, they have dedicated blocks for graphing and cross-platform implementations of Bluetooth for Android and iOS. The data format is still up to you. Source: almost 2 years ago
Or you could go to https://appinventor.mit.edu/ and design your own custom app (no widget, though). Source: about 2 years ago
If you want to make a mobile app you could try https://appinventor.mit.edu/. Source: about 2 years ago
Maybe a raspberry pi that's on 24/7 connected to wifi and use that to send the wake over lan signal to the server? Arduino on the power pins also works, I did something quite similar but with a Bluetooth board, the code was really simple I just made an Android app with MIT app inventor that sent a signal to the hc_05 bt board, once the Arduino received that signal it shorted the power pin to 5v for half a second... Source: over 2 years ago
Thunkable - Powerful but easy to use, drag-and-drop mobile app builder.
Knock App - Power your product notifications with Segment and Hightouch.
Kodular - Much more than a modern app creator without coding
Novu - The ultimate library for managing multi-channel transactional notifications with a single API.
Android Studio - Android development environment based on IntelliJ IDEA
SuprSend - Single Notification API for Every Channel (SMS, Slack, Whatsapp, Email, SMS, Push, App Inbox)