Today’s tech-savvy world calls everyone to be available online. It makes e-mail one of the most important mediums to get people interconnected today. People can share their thoughts, works and feelings from different parts of the world with the help of e-mail.
While e-mails have made our lives tremendously easy giving us a way to reach out to the people on the far ends of the world, do you know about the invention of @?
It is known that @ has its origin from the 1345 Bulgarian translation of the 12th century Manasses Chronicle. More further, it gives a short summary of the history till the 11th century. You might not be aware but @ was curated as a symbol for “amin” (amen). One more amazing fact to add in this is that there are no surviving instances of @ ever till two centuries. After the earliest example, @ was again discovered in the letter written by a Florentine merchant, and it was the year 1536.
After this, there were various studies and traces of @ that made it one of the most intimidating things in today’s world. One of the most amazing things that we would like you to know is, before 1345 and 1536 instances, it was considered that medieval monks invented the @symbol.
Were there any shorthand symbols created?
Yes, various shorthand symbols were created because every copy of the book had to be created with hands. For example, & is the extended version of the ampersand and is a shorthand for the world Latin et which means and. Another addition, in this case, can be X that was used for Christ. This shorthand basically began about a millennium ago. Coming back to the origin of the e-mail, it is often related to engineer Ray Tomlinson. It was a good day in 1971 that he was working for his own little version of the SNDMSG on the TENEX operating system.
Tomlinson used the @ sign so that it is not confused with the username. With this invention, he did a great favor on the society, who is enjoying working from their homes as well as offices today. There are various recognizable events that took place, which has made computer technology unbelievably fast and trouble-free. The first-ever message was sent between two machines. They were placed side by side. The single physical connection these machines had was ARPANET. In this, Tomlinson sent test messages to himself with the help of one machine to another.
As per Tomilson, the text messages exchanged initially were completely random. It was all gibberish and random at that moment, he added. When he was satisfied with the program, he forwarded the message to his group, explaining how they can send different messages over the network. With this, the procedure was successfully carried out. It marked the existence of the first-ever e-mail network.
So, it can be concluded that the invention of @ has been a great help so far in sending the messages from one place to another. People around the world are enjoying the services offered by different e-mail providers, and e-mail has undoubtedly become an essential part of our personal as well as professional lives.