--On Tuesday, August 31, 2010 13:54 -0400 Noel Chiappa
<jnc(_at_)mercury(_dot_)lcs(_dot_)mit(_dot_)edu> wrote:
> From: Fernando Gont <fernando(_at_)gont(_dot_)com(_dot_)ar>
> As far as I recall *reading* (I wasn't around at the
time :-) ) email > was a couple of FTP commands?
That was more back in the NCP days (prior to TCP/IP). SMTP
came in about the time TCP/IP was really starting to roll
(don't recall the exact timing, but it would have been circa
1980 or so).
Yes.
But, regardless of whether one counts from FTP-based email or
from SMTP, the statement that email was the only application is
simply nonsense. Telnet was alive and well, FTP was heavily
used (and I trust it is obvious that we could have had FTP-based
email without FTP), user and system information protocols like
finger and whois were around and in use, and so were a bunch of
things that are "applications" or not depending on one's
definitions and a fairly large collection of applications (not
just applications-support protocols) built directly on TCP (or
NCP, or later on various socket layers) whose descriptions never
made it into the RFC series.
john
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