Hello Ms. Horton,
In reading your initial part of your question, my visceral response was to think "the
email attachment was created by whoever developed uuencode."
Only, to discover you wrote uuencode.
So, who created the email attachment? Mary Ann Horton created the email attachment.
That's who.
Truly,
Bill Corcoran
On Mar 18, 2017, at 7:46 PM, Mary Ann Horton
<mah@mhorton.net<mailto:mah@mhorton.net>> wrote:
I'd like the opinion of this August Group.
Should I make a claim to be the inventor of the email attachment? (It would go on my web
site, resume, the Wikipedia page, that sort of thing.)
Here's my understanding of the time line on all of this.
1. Originally, our files were all plain text and we just included them in the email
message body. The ~r command in Kurt Shoen's Mail program was typical. There was no
name for this, we were just emailing files.
2. In 1980, I wrote uuencode. It's stated purpose was to "encode a binary
file for transmission by email". I didn't use the term "attachment".
It became part of 4.0BSD and later systems, and was widely used.
3. In 1985, Lotus created cc:Mail. It eventually included attachments, using a file
store method. When they added an SMTP gateway later, it used uuencode as the format. I
believe cc:Mail first used the term "attachment".
4. Microsoft did the same thing with MS Mail somewhat later, possibly in the 1990s. It
also used uuencode in the SMTP gateway.
5. In 1992, Nathaniel Borenstein and Ned Freed invented MIME. It had a different (and
IMHO much better) way to send attachments, and it became an Internet Standard sometime
later, possibly in 1996.
What do you all think?
Mary Ann