Published: Sept. 1, 2016 By

email

In the Beginning...

Better than most Buffs, Mike Carter聽(DistSt鈥85) recalls when email began聽catching fire on campus: In 1987 he聽became 精品SM在线影片鈥檚 very first 鈥渘etwork聽mail administrator.鈥澛

"Basically, my job was to make sure聽that email flowed between the various聽centrally managed email servers on聽campus and off,鈥 said the man known in聽campus IT circles as the 鈥淚TS historian.鈥澛

CU computer scientists and other聽researchers were using early forms of聽electronic messaging by the late 1970s,聽Carter said, and they were still the main聽users when he arrived as a computer-savvy freshman in 1981.

By his estimate, fewer than 1,000聽people on campus were then messaging聽by computer, and with decidedly primitive聽systems: They could leave and retrieve聽text-only messages on designated computers,聽but not transmit between them.听

The adoption of email as we鈥檇 recognize聽it today 鈥 computer-to-computer聽messaging 鈥 advanced throughout the聽1980s and exploded as the 鈥90s dawned.听

Sometime in the 1989-1991 period,聽the student government helped pay for聽the first servers dedicated to student聽email, Carter said, helping make it widely聽available to students.

鈥淭he early 鈥90s was when all this stuff聽blew up and became an important part聽of higher education,鈥 he said.

By 1992 精品SM在线影片 was providing聽every student with email as a matter of聽course. Faculty and staff got accounts a聽little sooner. Most people then would have聽used the Elm (short for electronic mail)聽email client and typically had addresses in聽the familiar form username@colorado.edu.听

In all, there are now about 180,000聽@colorado.edu addresses, including聽those assigned to alumni.

One of Carter鈥檚 earliest addresses,聽from 1982, could hardly have been聽simpler: It was mike@boulder.听

Remember yours? Email us:聽editor@colorado.edu.

Illustration courtesy Mike Carter