SMS Organizer is designed to cut through the clutter and provide a messaging experience that surfaces useful information at the top. Therefore, the app’s main interface is split into four sections: texts, reminders, finance, and offers messages. The reminders feature is one that is particularly useful to me: it parses the information in the texts and creates cards with actionable data. For flights, SMS Organizer will surface the date and time as well as the booking reservation number, and for things like credit card bills, it will show the due date and the total amount due. This feature isn’t new — Xiaomi has been doing the same in its stock MIUI messaging app for a few years now, but with SMS Organizer you can use it on any device.
It has a dark theme, cleanup rules, an option to automatically back up to Google Drive, and a reminder feature.
SMS Organizer uses machine learning models to classify SMS messages into personal, promotional and transactional categories. Within the transactional category, the model identifies a class of messages that are actionable through reminders and parses them for important details that are required for triggering and displaying reminders.
"We took user privacy very seriously from the beginning and designed the app around the fundamental premise that SMS is a very private entity for a user. The user should have absolute control around how they manage and backup their SMS. Hence, all the data classification is done on the device and none of the SMS content is ever uploaded to the cloud."
See #^https://www.androidcentral.com/breaking-down-microsoft-and-samsung-partnership
#SMS #microsoft #messaging
#^Breaking down the Microsoft and Samsung partnership
Microsoft’s and Samsung’s partnership is a big deal. But it isn’t just about mobile; it’s about Windows too. Let’s break it all down and see what we’ve got in store for the future.