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Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

The Man Who Made You Put Away Your Pen

When was the last time you actually set pen to paper and mailed off a personal letter to someone? It's probably been awhile — and the man to blame is Ray Tomlinson.

Back in 1971, Tomlinson was a young engineer at the Boston firm of Bolt, Beranek and Newman — known today as BBN Technologies. He'd been given a task: Figure out something interesting to do with ARPANET, the newborn computer network that was the predecessor of the modern-day Internet.

"We were working on ways in which humans and computers could interact," he tells NPR's Guy Raz. But instead, Tomlinson started tinkering with the interaction — or lack of it — between distant colleagues who didn't answer their phones. He eventually found a way to send messages from one computer to another — inventing the system we now know as e-mail.

He began by sending messages between two computers in his office. "The keyboards were about 10 feet apart," he remembers. "I could wheel my chair from one to the other and type a message on one, and then go to the other, and then see what I had tried to send."

Unfortunately for posterity, Tomlinson doesn't remember what was in that first e-mail. The test messages he sent to himself were often just gibberish — strings of characters or a few phrases from the Gettysburg Address. "The first e-mail is completely forgettable," he says. "And, therefore, forgotten."

By way of his invention, Tomlinson is also responsible for the elevation of the @ sign from symbol to icon. To send messages between different computers, he needed a way to separate the names of senders and recipients from the names of their machines. The @ sign just made sense; it wasn't commonly used in computing back then, so there wouldn't be too much confusion. The symbol turns an e-mail address into a phrase; it means "user 'at' host," Tomlinson explains. "It's the only preposition on the keyboard."

Today, more than a billion people around the world type that @ sign every day. Tomlinson says that back in 1971, he did have some idea of the impact his invention would have.

"What I didn't imagine was how quickly that would happen."

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The 50 Best Inventions of 2009


From a rocket of the future to a $10 million lightbulb, here are TIME's picks for the best new gadgets and breakthrough ideas of the year
The Best Inventions
  1. The Best Invention of the Year: NASA's Ares Rockets
  2. The Tank-Bred Tuna
  3. The $10 Million Lightbulb
  4. The Smart Thermostat
  5. Controller-Free Gaming
  6. Teleportation
  7. The Telescope for Invisible Stars
  8. The AIDS Vaccine
  9. Tweeting by Thinking
  10. The Electric Eye
  11. The Mercury Probe
  12. The Personal Carbon Footprint
  13. The Solar Shingle
  14. The Handheld Ultrasound
  15. The YikeBike
  16. Vertical Farming
  17. The Planetary Skin
  18. The $20 Knee
  19. A Watchdog for Financial Products
  20. The Electric Microbe
  21. The Bladeless Fan
  22. The Custom Puppy
  23. The Cyborg Beetle
  24. The Biotech Stradivarius
  25. The Nissan Leaf
  26. The Robo-Penguin
  27. The Universal Unicycle
  28. YouTube Funk
  29. Dandelion Rubber
  30. Wooden Bones
  31. The Living Wall
  32. The School of One
  33. The No-Punt Offense
  34. The Human-Powered Vending Machine
  35. The Handyman's X-Ray Vision
  36. Meat Farms
  37. Packing, Improved
  38. The Foldable Speaker
  39. The Levitating Mouse
  40. The Edible Race Car
  41. The High-Speed Helicopter
  42. The Supersuit
  43. The Eyeborg
  44. Spiderweb Silk
  45. The Sky King
  46. The Smart Bullet
  47. The Fashion Robot
  48. The 3-D Camera
  49. The Newest Cloud
  50. The World's Fastest (Steam-Powered) Car

The Five Worst Inventions


The Smile Police

Employees at Keihin Electric Express Railway in Japan have their smiles scanned by software to maximize cheeriness


The Jane Austen Monster Mashup Novel
It started with Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Please let it end soon.


Snuggies for Dogs
It's bad enough that humans wear "the blanket with sleeves." Do we have to put them on dogs as well? Do we really?


The Gas-Mask Bra
You have to admire the good intentions of the inventor who made a bra that converts handily into a pair of gas masks


Computer Critics
A new standardized test in the U.K. will use software, not humans, to grade student essays. Shakespeare wept.