Internet pioneer Ray Tomlinson, who is credited with the invention of e-mail, has died at the age of 74, media reports said.
According to reports, Tomlinson died of an apparent heart attack late on Saturday.
The US computer programmer came up with the idea of electronic messages that could be sent from one network to another in 1971, BBC reported.
His invention included the ground-breaking use of the “@” symbol in e-mail addresses, which is now standard.
He sent what is now regarded as the first e-mail while working in Boston as an engineer for research company Bolt, Beranek and Newman.
The firm played a big role in developing an early version of the internet, known as Arpanet.
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However, Tomlinson later said he could not remember what was in that first test message, describing it as “completely forgettable”.
A BBC report said his work was recognised by his peers in 2012, when he was inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame. Tomlinson, became a cult figure for his invention in 1971 of a program for ARPANET, one that allowed users to communicate to one another via computers and servers using messages.
Born in Amsterdam, New York, Tomlinson went to school at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and MIT in the 1960s. Tomlinson soon joined research and development company, Bolt Beranek and Newman that is now Raytheon BBN Technologies.
With inputs from IANS