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Mr. Crocker is often reffered as one of the Inventors and Designer of E-mail. He developed [[MS]], based on the design of [[MSG]], which was the first modern Email sender program. MS was designed for UNIX operating system. Its idea was initiated by Steve Walker, who was then the Program Manager at [[DAPRA]]. While [[Dave Farber]] managed the overall work for the program, Mr. Crocker designed the functional specifications and [[Steve Tepper]] and [[Bill Crosby]] did the programming.
 
Mr. Crocker is often reffered as one of the Inventors and Designer of E-mail. He developed [[MS]], based on the design of [[MSG]], which was the first modern Email sender program. MS was designed for UNIX operating system. Its idea was initiated by Steve Walker, who was then the Program Manager at [[DAPRA]]. While [[Dave Farber]] managed the overall work for the program, Mr. Crocker designed the functional specifications and [[Steve Tepper]] and [[Bill Crosby]] did the programming.
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In 1977, Mr. Crocker, [[John Vittal]], [[Kenneth Pogran]], and [[Austin Henderson]] worked together on a DARPA initiative that was meant to collect various email data formats into a single, coherent specification. The result of there work was [http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc733.txt RFC 733]. In 1982, Dave revised RFC 733 and made [http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc822.txt RFC 822], which was the first standard to describe the syntax of [[domain name]].
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In 1977, Mr. Crocker, [[John Vittal]], [[Kenneth Pogran]], and [[Austin Henderson]] worked together on a DARPA initiative that was meant to collect various email data formats into a single, coherent specification. The result of there work was [http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc733.txt RFC 733]. In 1982, Dave revised RFC 733 and prepared [http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc822.txt RFC 822], which was the first standard to describe the syntax of [[domain name]].
    
In 1978 Mr. Crocker worked again with Dave Farber at the University of Delaware and developed the first versions of what would become the Multi-purpose Memo Distribution Facility ([[MMDF]]). This project was for the U.S. Army Materiel Command.<ref>[http://www.livinginternet.com/e/ei.htm livinginternet.com]</ref>
 
In 1978 Mr. Crocker worked again with Dave Farber at the University of Delaware and developed the first versions of what would become the Multi-purpose Memo Distribution Facility ([[MMDF]]). This project was for the U.S. Army Materiel Command.<ref>[http://www.livinginternet.com/e/ei.htm livinginternet.com]</ref>