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Miami Tech News
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Miami Tech News
@MiamiTechNews
Tech news out of #Miami
Miami, Florida 参加日 Kasım 2010
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Miami Tech News がリツイート

Every email you’ve ever sent uses a symbol one engineer picked in 30 seconds. He wasn’t supposed to be building email. When he showed a colleague, the first words were: “Don’t tell anyone. This isn’t what we’re supposed to be working on.”
In 1971, Ray Tomlinson was an engineer at a tech company in Cambridge, Massachusetts that had a government contract to build an early version of the internet. His actual job was writing code to move files between computers. Nobody asked him to build a messaging system. He picked it up as a side project because it “seemed like a neat idea.”
So he needed to figure out addressing. If you’re sending a message from your computer to mine, the system needs to know two things: my name, and which computer I’m on. He needed one character to separate those two pieces. He looked down at his keyboard, an old mechanical terminal called a Teletype where @ sat above the letter P, and ran through his options. Exclamation point was already being used in programming, so that was out. Comma, same problem. Equal sign didn’t make sense. The @ was just sitting there, unused by almost anyone, and it already meant “at” in old pricing shorthand. He picked it and moved on.
The first email went between two computers sitting next to each other in the same room. The message was probably just “QWERTYUIOP,” the top row of the keyboard. He later said the test messages were “entirely forgettable and I have, therefore, forgotten them.” I think it might be the most nonchalant origin story in computing. The guy invented the most used communication format on earth and didn’t even bother to write a real sentence.
Two years later, email made up 75% of all traffic on that early internet. The Pentagon was furious. Defense Department auditors said they’d accidentally built a communication system, which wasn’t their job. They got officially reprimanded for it.
The @ symbol is way older than computers. First known use was in 1536, by a merchant in Florence named Francesco Lapi, writing about wine shipments. He used @ as shorthand for a clay jar used to measure wine. From there it ended up on typewriter keyboards as a pricing notation (“10 apples @ $1 each”), and by 1971 it had been sitting on keyboards for decades while almost nobody touched it.
Today, about 392 billion emails cross the internet every single day. Every one of them carries the @ that one engineer chose during an unauthorized side project 55 years ago, a project he was told to keep quiet about.
Historic Vids@historyinmemes
The “@” symbol in your email exists because of one engineer’s decision
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This view just hits different 🌍
@Astro_Christina and @astro_reid take a moment to look back at Earth as they continue deep into space toward the Moon.


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#NASA Confirms #Artemis II Earth Photo Was Taken on an #iPhone 17 Pro Max ibtimes.co.uk/nasa-artemis-i…
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NASA pays $100M for Microsoft 365 licensing across the agency. They standardized every system on Microsoft. They put Microsoft Surfaces on the Orion spacecraft as the crew's personal computing devices.
And the first technical crisis of humanity's return to the Moon was Reid Wiseman radioing Houston to say he has two Microsoft Outlooks and neither one works.
Mission Control's response? "With your go, we can remote in and take a look." The same exact workflow your company's IT helpdesk uses when you submit a ticket on a Monday morning. Except the user is traveling at 4,275 mph, 30,000 miles from Earth, and the Wi-Fi situation is considerably worse.
This spacecraft survived hydrogen leaks, helium leaks, a faulty heat shield, and a broken toilet. Outlook broke anyway. The toilet actually got fixed faster.
The real story here is that Microsoft has achieved something no other software company in history can claim: a support ticket from lunar transit. Their enterprise sales team should frame this. "Battle-tested in space" is a positioning statement most B2B companies would mass murder for, and Microsoft accidentally earned it because Outlook crashes everywhere, including orbit.
Outlook remains the only software in human history that performs identically whether you're in a cubicle in Redmond or aboard a spacecraft bound for the Moon. Universally, reliably broken. And we keep buying it anyway.
Polymarket@Polymarket
JUST IN: Artemis II crew experiences issues with Microsoft Outlook on their way to the Moon, asks ground crew for assistance.
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Miami Tech News がリツイート
Miami Tech News がリツイート

NASA's SLS (Space Launch System) rocket and Orion spacecraft are getting ready to roll back to Launch Pad 39B for the @NASAArtemis II mission. Teams are currently monitoring the wind speeds before rolling out of @NASAKennedy Vehicle Assembly Building. Follow along: youtube.com/live/ED2nbfb3N…

YouTube

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Miami Tech News がリツイート
Miami Tech News がリツイート
Miami Tech News がリツイート
Miami Tech News がリツイート

@bevel_health Issues still hasn’t been resolved and still showing up with the Summer release. Weight is still being cut off if user has display zoom enabled in the iPhone. When can we expect a fix?

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@bevel_health There is a display issue in the Bevel app. In the Biology section the weight is cut off. Most likely being cause by using display zoom. Can you look into it so users who require display zoom due to accessibly issues can use the app. See image below.

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@bevel_health Thanks make sure to enable display zoom (see screen shot below) to recreate the issue. Screen size would be the 6.3 in iPhone.

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Miami Tech News がリツイート
Miami Tech News がリツイート

I've used the #Polaroid Flip – it's the best Polaroid camera you can buy | T3 t3.com/tech/cameras/p…
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