Tomlinson's system gained popularity by linking up users on Arpanet, the US department of defence system that became the basis for the internet.
1972: Larry Roberts - also at work on Arpanet - writes the first email management program that develops the ability to list, select, forward, and respond to messages.
1976: Queen Elizabeth II sends an email message on Arpanet, becoming the first head of state to do so.
1988: Steve Dorner invents Eudora, an application that gave a popular face to email by providing a graphical user interface for email management.
1989: The first release of Lotus Notes email software. 35,000 copies are sold in the first year.
1996: Microsoft releases Internet Mail and News 1.0, a feature of its third release of Internet Explorer. This is later renamed Outlook.
1996: A few companies - including the fledgling Hotmail - begin to offer free, use-anywhere, internet email.
1997: About 10 million users world wide have free web mail accounts.
1998: Microsoft buys Hotmail for $400m (£283m).
2001: Email celebrates its 30th anniversary with virtually every business in the developed world signed on.
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