E-mail has been around longer than the World Wide Web.
E-mail Predates the Web by Nearly Two Decades
It's hard to imagine, but email is actually a 1970s technology. Ray Tomlinson sent the first email in 1971 between two computers on ARPANET, nearly two decades before most people had ever heard of the World Wide Web. That first message? Probably just "qwertyuiop" — the top row of his keyboard.
Tomlinson's real innovation wasn't just sending the message. He chose the @ symbol to separate the user's name from the computer name, creating the email address format we still use today. It was sitting right there on his keyboard, rarely used, and it perfectly meant "at" a particular location.
The Web Was Still Science Fiction
While email users were already exchanging messages in the early 1970s, Tim Berners-Lee wouldn't propose the World Wide Web until March 1989. He was working at CERN, trying to solve a problem: scientists needed a better way to share information across different computers.
The Web didn't go public until August 6, 1991, when Berners-Lee posted about it on Internet newsgroups. By that point, email had been the dominant form of traffic on ARPANET for over 15 years — accounting for 75% of network activity as early as 1976.
Two Different Inventions
Here's what makes this fact even more interesting: email and the Web aren't the same thing as the Internet. The Internet is the underlying network infrastructure. Email was built on top of it first, then the Web came along later as a different way to use that same infrastructure.
Think of it this way:
- The Internet is like the road system
- Email is like the postal trucks that drive on those roads
- The Web is like the billboards and storefronts along the highway
They all work together now, but they were invented separately, at different times, to solve different problems.
Why This Surprises People
Most of us associate email with the web because that's how we access it today — through Gmail, Outlook, or Yahoo in a web browser. But email existed long before web browsers were invented. Early users accessed their email through command-line interfaces on university and military computers.
The Web eventually became the face of the Internet for most people. It's visual, it's clickable, and it fundamentally changed how we think about connected computers. Email just quietly kept working in the background, doing exactly what it was designed to do in 1971.