Email Invention: Homing in on Compuserve "GO EMAIL"
Hello, I'm now homing in on CompuServe as a possible vector for the popularization of the word "email," perhaps as early as 1979. What I know so far: . In 1979 Compserve, formerly a business oriented timesharing business, launched a consumer oriented $5 an hour service called Micronet. In 1980 this was rebranded as Compuserve Information Service. . Electronic mail using numerical DEC userIDs as account names seems to have been there from the outset. . There was some attempt to brand a Compuserve email service as "Infoplex," circa 1978/9 onward but this may have been a separate service aimed at business. . By 1984 email was definitely accessed on compuserve by typing "GO EMAIL" http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu//full/1984IAPPP..17...11H/0000011.000.htm l <http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1984IAPPP..17...11H/0000011.000.htm l> . Compuserve filed a trademark application for email in 1983, citing a first use in commerce in 1981. It was abandoned in 1984. (Verified with TESS database). Anyone find anything to firmly document "GO EMAIL" before 1984? Micronet was used particularly with the TRS-80, so user group materials might be one source. Tom
Thanks for digging this up Tom. I used that service in 1984 (using a Kaypro II), and I found a note in my files, dated January, 1985, stating that "you can reach me via E-mail on Compuserve, ID # 73036.635." BTW, that was an octal number, as the service was run off PDP-10s, unless someone can correct me. I don't think I used it before 1984. Paul E. Ceruzzi Chair, Division of Space History National Air & Space Museum MRC 311; PO Box 37012 Washington, DC 20013-7012 202-633-2414 <http://www.nasm.si.edu/staffDetail.cfm?staffID=24> From: members-bounces@sigcis.org [mailto:members-bounces@sigcis.org] On Behalf Of Thomas Haigh Sent: Wednesday, February 29, 2012 6:33 PM To: members@sigcis.org Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] Email Invention: Homing in on Compuserve "GO EMAIL" Hello, I'm now homing in on CompuServe as a possible vector for the popularization of the word "email," perhaps as early as 1979. What I know so far: * In 1979 Compserve, formerly a business oriented timesharing business, launched a consumer oriented $5 an hour service called Micronet. In 1980 this was rebranded as Compuserve Information Service. * Electronic mail using numerical DEC userIDs as account names seems to have been there from the outset. * There was some attempt to brand a Compuserve email service as "Infoplex," circa 1978/9 onward but this may have been a separate service aimed at business. * By 1984 email was definitely accessed on compuserve by typing "GO EMAIL" http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu//full/1984IAPPP..17...11H/0000011.000.html<http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1984IAPPP..17...11H/0000011.000.html> * Compuserve filed a trademark application for email in 1983, citing a first use in commerce in 1981. It was abandoned in 1984. (Verified with TESS database). Anyone find anything to firmly document "GO EMAIL" before 1984? Micronet was used particularly with the TRS-80, so user group materials might be one source. Tom
While the relevant work at CTSS is well recorded on Tom Van Vleck's Multicians.org website, the story is also told in his Anecdote in the current issue (2012-1) of the Annals of the History of Computing -- nicely "au courant" given the current controversy. <http://www.computer.org/csdl/mags/an/2012/01/index.html>http://www.computer.org/csdl/mags/an/2012/01/index.html
participants (3)
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Ceruzzi, Paul -
Dave Walden -
Thomas Haigh