The Changing Face of E-Mail

Published: 4 June 2004 y., Friday
Information overload will drive e-mail into the ground unless software vendors act now and make major changes to the 30-year-old technology, warned a leading Internet expert Wednesday. During his keynote speech at the Inbox e-mail technology conference, Eric Hahn, CEO of antispam firm Proofpoint, called on software developers to stop treating e-mail inboxes as places to dump memos and start thinking of them as control centers that combine e-mail, instant messaging, voicemail and other communications. E-mail technology has remained virtually unchanged since it was first developed in the early 1970s. But as more and more individuals and businesses have begun to rely on their inboxes to manage important documents -- and as marketers have begun to fill those inboxes with spam -- the system has begun to show signs of stress. E-mail "is broken," said Hahn, who made his name in the industry during his days as Netscape's chief technology officer. "We need to make metaphoric changes." As an example, Hahn pointed to the file-folder metaphor that most e-mail software uses to store messages. "The metaphor was designed back when (we were) talking about getting five messages a day." Today, he said, many people are getting 10 to 20 times as many messages, and filing each one just takes too much time.
Šaltinis: wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Intel may use SOI in the future

Not ruled out, not ruled in more »

ICANN finally working on 'substantive issues'

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), meeting in Carthage, Tunisia this week, will be getting down to brass tacks on how the Internet works for the first time more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Romania fighting ring of Internet vampires

Romania emerges as new world nexus of cybercrime more »

Alaska adopts crime data mining

A consortium of Alaskan law enforcement agencies today announced a new information sharing initiative that uses the commercially-available Coplink system to analyze disparate pieces of data for investigative leads more »

Students Fight E-Vote Firm

A group of students at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania has launched an "electronic civil disobedience" campaign more »

Ballmer Touches All Bases

Microsoft Corp. has a variety of "opportunities" to take cost out of the development, deployment and day-to-day operations of IT systems more »

Spies Attack White House Secrecy

There's a "total meltdown" in America's intelligence services more »

Microsoft Drives Toward One Code Base

Project Green aims to bring enterprise applications, including Great Plains and Navision, into a single unified .Net architecture more »