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Happy Birthday Email
Did you know that email is 30 this year? Time
for a mid-life crisis? David Dorn thinks it might be!
The first message sent in Morse Code on May 24, 1844
was, "What hath God wrought."
The first message sent over Graham Bell's telephone
on March 10, 1876 was, "Mr. Watson, come here; I want you."
The first words to a phonograph in 1877, by Thomas
Edison were, "Mary had a little lamb."
The first words said from the moon in 1969 were,
"Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed."
For all of those events, we have the dates, times,
first words, and possibly even what the loquacious person was
wearing all on file, well documented, and there to be looked up
forever.
The same, though, cannot be said for Email. To the
best of our knowledge, the first email was sent by an American by
the name of Ray Tomlinson, an engineer who was tasked with the job
of creating a method of messaging on a single machine (multi-user,
of course), eventually called SNDMSG (say it out loud – “SeNDMeSsaGe”).
Not that SNDMSG was what you’d call email, really. More like a
sticky note!
According to my research, he hit on the bright idea
of using SNDMSG across a network to another machine, indicating to
his software that the recipient wasn’t on the local machine by
adding an “@” sign and the name of the other machine.
Thus was the first ever email address formed.
It seems that Tomlinson remembers sending an
“email” to himself, from one machine to the other, but he
can’t remember what it said, or when he did it. As best we can
narrow it down (and in best press release speak) it was third
quarter 1971, and probably had a content of “QWERTYUIOP”,
all in upper case!
So, the father of email started off with a bad habit
– shouting in email!
Since then, of course, things have grown apace. I
well remember using linked bulleting board systems to shuffle email
around before the Internet as we know it today was born – before
AOL was born, even! None of your immediate delivery, either. It took
a couple of days for an email to get where it was going, and another
couple of days after that to get a reply.
These days, using IMs, we can get a message through
quicker than you can type it and emails get through in mere seconds.
The trouble is, emails are bloated now. All this
HTML capability, attachments, fonts, colours, embedded images,
wallpaper… to this somewhat ancient geek, there’s quite often
loads of wrapping, but not a lot of sweetness in what I receive.
But still, with the speeds we connect at these days,
such fripperies become less of an encumbrance. In my early days, you
see, we connected at a humble 300 bits per second, or, even worse,
we had 75 bits per second upload speed, and 1200 bits per second
download speed. Sending an email at those speeds was not a quick
experience.
So, we kept them simple – plain text, nothing
else. And given that often, we paid by the character to get them
delivered, you kept to the point, as well. Actually, now I come to
think of it, email then was a lot like texting on a mobile phone
today.
Now, I wonder where texting will be in thirty
years’ time?
Have your say - click here
David Dorn
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