deja vu

Sep. 24th, 2003 09:23 am
cellio: (avatar)
[personal profile] cellio
In the early days, email was unreliable and slow. We had to route messages by hand, and each machine in the network might process its UUCP queue only once or twice a day. It could take days for a message to get to its recipient, and sometimes it didn't get there at all.

Then, the ARPANet became dominant and email was faster and more reliable. Most people using it were "practicioners" of various sorts; the average guy on the street didn't yet have email.

Then two things happened: spam, and widespread email access (making spam even more profitable). Now, almost 10 years after the green-card lawyers created the first piece of spam and AOL sent out its first mass (physical) mailing of software, we're all swimming in spam, and virii, and lures (for the unsuspecting) to "just click here", and the attendant side effects. So we have filters and auto-processing of various sorts, and this month most of us aren't inspecting bounced-message reports because of all the SoBig-generated false ones, so we don't even know if we're seeing all our mail or if the mail we send gets through. Sometimes we have to send messages several times, or actually tell someone "I sent you email", before the recipient actually sees it.

25 years after the rise of UUCP, email is unreliable and slow again. Oops.

Re: Not having problems

Date: 2003-09-24 10:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miz-hatbox.livejournal.com
I hear you. There are people I want to get in touch with that I haven't seen in a while, and my email address has changed. I don't mind carefully composing messages, but having to obsess over the perfect subject line just to get the message read? Sheesh. It's like having to draft little tiny cover letters for all my emails!

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