Windsor Star

COMPUTER PIONEER INVENTED EMAIL

Programmer who adopted the @ symbol didn’t become rich

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Ray Tomlinson, who died aged 74 on March 5, was a computer programmer generally credited as the man who invented the email, in the process transformi­ng the way we communicat­e and socialize.

The first electronic messaging system, developed in the 1960s, would only allow messages to be exchanged between users on the same computer. In the late 1960s, however, the American Defence Department’s Advanced Research Projects Agency launched the Arpanet, a program designed to create a network tying together disparate computer science programs it was funding around the country. This is now considered the precursor to the Internet.

In 1971, Tomlinson was working at the Boston-based technology company Bolt, Beranek and Newman, a major contractor on the Arpanet, trying, in his own words “to find things to use this newfangled network for.” He had heard about a proposal to send messages to be printed with a printer and stuffed away in mailboxes for people to read and had the idea that messages should go to computers instead: “I thought about it for a bit and then decided to put together a system that might do that.”

Borrowing a code from a filetransf­er program he had created called Cpynet, Tomlinson modified an existing internal computer messaging program so that messages could be sent between two machines that were side-by-side on his desk. When he wrote the program he needed to find a punctuatio­n symbol to separate the name of the recipient from their computer location. He chose the symbol “@” (known as the asperand), the least used sign and only prepositio­n on the keyboard.

At first, Tomlinson did not consider his email messaging system to be significan­t. “Don’t tell anyone! This isn’t what we’re supposed to be working on,” he told a colleague.

Yet email quickly matured from a fun idea to a central feature of the Arpanet — and later the Internet.

“I’m often asked ‘Did I know what I was doing?’ ” Tomlinson said when he was inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame in 2012. “The answer is: Yeah, I knew exactly what I was doing. I just had no notion whatsoever about what the ultimate impact would be.”

History, sadly, does not record the content of the first ever email message, Tomlinson describing it as “insignific­ant, something like QWERTYUIOP”.

Yeah, I knew exactly what I was doing. I just had no notion whatsoever about what the ultimate impact would be.

Raymond Samuel Tomlinson was born in Amsterdam, N.Y., on April 23, 1941, and brought up in nearby Vail Mills. From Broadalbin Central School, he took a degree in electrical engineerin­g at Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute in Troy, N.Y., followed by a master’s degree at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, where he developed an analog-digital hybrid speech synthesize­r.

In 1967, he joined Bolt, Beranek and Newman (now Raytheon), where he continued to work until his death.

Tomlinson did not become rich from his invention, confessing that he had often wondered what fraction of a cent per @ sign it would it take to make him very comfortabl­y off: “It’s a very small fraction.”

Described by a friend as “surprising­ly, not addicted to email,” Tomlinson lived in Lincoln, Mass., where he and his partner Karen raised miniature sheep. She survives him with two daughters from an earlier marriage.

 ?? RAYTHEON VIA THE INTERNET HALL OF FAME VIA AP ?? Raymond Tomlinson, the inventor of modern email and use of the @ symbol, has died. .
RAYTHEON VIA THE INTERNET HALL OF FAME VIA AP Raymond Tomlinson, the inventor of modern email and use of the @ symbol, has died. .

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