| e-mailm@nThe year was 1971. The writer was Ray Tomlinson      The 
        Alexander Graham Bell of e-mail is Ray Tomlinson, and he can't even remember 
        the first message he sent. "It may have been 'QWERTYUIOP,' or just 
        'TESTING,'" Tomlinson says.  Admittedly, typing 10 
        consecutive letters on a computer keyboard isn't nearly as dramatic as 
        Bell's "Watson, come here, I need you!" in 1876, but the from 
        of communication that evolved is every bit as far-reaching and revolutionary 
        as the telephone.  "The development of e-mail stands out 
        as a crucial moment in the history of computer-mediated communication," 
        Ian Hardy, a Berkeley cyberhistorian, told me, appropriately enough, in 
        an e-mail message. "Before e-mail, people didn't view computers as 
        tools for talking to one another."  In fact, in 1958, sending instant messages 
        was probably the furthest thing from the minds of the engineers who set 
        up ARPANET, the antecedent of today's Internet. Forget chatting. ARPANET 
        was created by the Defense Department's Advanced Research Projects Agency 
        in direct response to the Soviet Union's launch the previous year of Sputnik 
        I. The idea was to link computers at remonte sites so massive files could 
        be transferred from one researcher to another.
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