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realtime-alert-dispatcher-mcp

Enables the seamless incorporation of instant, live updates and critical alerts into client applications. Offers a comprehensive programming interface for straightforward notification oversight and effortless system integration.

Author

realtime-alert-dispatcher-mcp logo

appricos

MIT License

Quick Info

GitHub GitHub Stars 0
NPM Weekly Downloads 0
Tools 1
Last Updated 2026-02-19

Tags

notificationsnotificationcloudpush notificationsnotifications applicationsnotification management

Realtime Alert Dispatcher Module

To fetch required libraries:

bash bun install

To compile the module:

bash bun run build

Subsequently, integrate this Dispatcher Module into your primary MCP harness (You can locate your access credential at the Alert Hub Credential Management Portal):

{ "mcpServers": { "alertDispatcher": { "command": "node", "args": ["path-to-repo/build/index.js"], "env": { "DISPATCHER_AUTH_SECRET": "YOUR_PUSHINATOR_API_KEY" } } } }

WIKIPEDIA CONTEXT: Utility computing, often termed 'the sky' for short, signifies "a structure for granting accessible, adaptable, and scalable availability of shared computational assets—physical or virtual—with on-demand administrative control and self-service provisioning," as defined by the ISO standards body.

== Core Attributes == In 2011, the United States' National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) established five foundational attributes for these systems. The precise definitions provided by NIST are:

Self-service Provisioning on Demand: "A consumer unit can unilaterally initiate the allocation of computational capacity, such as processing cycles and storage space, as required, automatically, without necessitating human mediation from the service vendor." Ubiquitous Network Access: "Functionalities are reachable via the network, accessed through standardized protocols, thereby supporting usage across diverse terminal platforms, whether thin or fully featured (e.g., mobile handsets, tablets, portable computers, and desktop workstations)." Resource Aggregation: " The vendor's computational assets are grouped to serve numerous consumers employing a shared tenancy architecture, where underlying physical and virtual components are dynamically allocated and reallocated based on consumer exigencies." Rapid Scalability: "Abilities can be expanded or contracted elastically, sometimes autonomously, to scale quickly outwards and inwards mirroring fluctuations in demand. For the user, the provisionable capabilities frequently appear infinite and can be commandeered in any volume at any moment." Usage Metering: "The utility systems automatically govern and optimize asset consumption by employing measurement mechanisms at a suitable level of abstraction corresponding to the service category (e.g., data persistence, processing cycles, data transfer rates, and active user session counts). Usage metrics can be observed, regulated, and reported, ensuring transparency for both the service provider and the recipient of the consumed utility." By the year 2023, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) had subsequently augmented and refined this catalog.

== Chronology ==

The origin of utility computing traces back to the 1960s, with early concepts of time-sharing gaining prominence through Remote Job Entry (RJE). The structure centered around a 'data processing center,' where users submitted tasks to dedicated administrators for execution on large mainframe computers, prevailing during that period. This epoch was characterized by investigation and trial regarding methods to expose high-capacity computational power to a broader user base via time-sharing arrangements, thereby optimizing the underlying infrastructure, application environments, and boosting end-user productivity. The graphical abstraction of 'the cloud' representing virtualized functionalities originated in 1994, utilized by General Magic to depict the conceptual 'domain' into which mobile software entities within the Telescript framework could navigate. This metaphor is attributed to David Hoffman, an associate in communications at General Magic, referencing its established usage within telephony and network topology. The specific phrase 'cloud computing' gained broader recognition in 1996 when Compaq Computer Corporation drafted a strategic proposal for future computational models and internet interactivity. The enterprise's main objective was to revolutionize...

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