Wildfire offers enterprise edition of its virtual assistant. (New Products).Wildfire Communications, Inc., a provider of voice-activated virtual assistant technology, has announced the release of the Enterprise Edition of its Wildfire Assistant. The expanded release of the company's virtual assistant introduces group messaging capabilities designed to give corporate users increased functionality with both wireless and wireline telephones. These new benefits, combined with the current Wildfire feature set, will help enable companies to improve their overall communications and productivity through a simple, intuitive voice interface. Wildfire is a telephone-based virtual assistant that provides a single means to manage all of a user's communications through voice or touch-tone The common system for pressing a button and entering a telephone number into a telephone. The first such phones were installed in two Pennsylvania towns in the early 1960s. See DTMF. commands. 'She" takes messages, manages contacts, dials outgoing calls, handles faxes and allows users to screen incoming calls, all without the user ever touching the keypad A small keyboard or supplementary keyboard keys; for example, the keys on a calculator or the number/cursor cluster on a computer keyboard. See programmable keypad. . Wildfire Enterprise Edition has been enhanced with more powerful features to provide businesses with a single communications platform tha t improves one number access for corporate and personal information management, increases productivity and telecommuting telecommuting, an arrangement by which people work at home using a computer and telephone, transmitting work material to a business office by means of a modem and telephone lines; it is also known as telework. access, and advances employee accessibility and interaction. The new component to this release is its group messaging capabilities. Specifically, Wildfire's enhanced enterprise capabilities enable business users to send, reply or forward a recorded message or fax to an individual or a group; create spoken group distribution lists; retrieve To call up data that has been stored in a computer system. When a user queries a database, the data are retrieved into the computer first and then transmitted to the screen. (language) Retrieve the most recent items from the "trash," enabling users to recover discarded dis·card v. dis·card·ed, dis·card·ing, dis·cards v.tr. 1. To throw away; reject. 2. a. To throw out (a playing card) from one's hand. b. voice messages and fixes; search an inbox An area in memory or on disk that holds received messages that have not been read or processed. Contrast with outbox. for messages by contact, basic place or phone number. |
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