AlertSite Announces Web Site Monitoring, Notification Service.
Published:
23 September 1999 y., Thursday
AlertSite Tuesday unveiled a free service that monitors Web sites around the clock. Web site admins receive instant notification when any problems are detected at their site. Companies can not only monitor the status of their Web sites, but they can also find out if their Web server is reliable. Does it serve Web pages, content and images in a timely manner to their users? AlertSite offers their free hourly Web site monitoring service through the use of a Web-based robot called SiteWatchdog. SiteWatchdog monitors Web sites from an independent connection to the Internet. The service immediately notifies site administrators via email and/or pager when it detects a problem. AlertSite believes that their software provides the best possible reliability in error detection by using a variety of critical tests that analyze a site_s performance, content, availability, scripts and security measures. Daily graphical reports are emailed to users, and all data is available for analysis and reporting. Members can upgrade their service for more frequent monitoring for additional monthly fees.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Microsoft Friday popped the cork on its plans to sell software through subscriptions, rather than through licenses as it now does.
more »
Microsoft has completed a near-final version of its 64-bit edition of Windows 2000 that will be sent to all software developers with Itanium prototype computers.
more »
The Intel Corporation has filed a trademark legal suit against Intelnet, Inc., a firm which specialises in er... intelligent networks and fingerprint verification.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
A Somerset pig farmer has been crowned Britain's top dotcom business king.
more »
A 20-year-old man was arrested on Wednesday for allegedly breaking into two computers owned by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and using one to host Internet chat rooms devoted to hacking.
more »
Don't bury the beige box yet, analysts say.
more »
An IBM supercomputer designed for simulating nuclear explosions has turned out to be 23 percent faster than anticipated when the project began.
more »
Vodafone AirTouch said Wednesday it added a record 6.6 million mobile phone customers in the second quarter.
more »
Orange said Wednesday it paid 95 million pounds ($144 million) in cash for Web site Ananova, home to the first computer-generated newscaster.
more »