MARK CRISPIN
'Mark Crispin' (born 1956) is a staff member at the University of Washington, noted as the inventor of IMAP. He is the author or co-author of numerous RFCs; and is the principal author of UW IMAP, one of the reference implementations of the IMAP4rev1 protocol described in 'RFC 3501'.
In the late 1970s, he developed the first production PDP-10 32-bit address ARPAnet NCP for the WAITS operating system; prior to that time most systems only supported the original 8-bit addresses. During that time, he also wrote a series of Telnet implementations for the Incompatible Timesharing System, WAITS, and TOPS-20 operating systems whose escape behavior was immortalized by Guy Steele in the April 1984 Communications of the ACM as ''The Telnet Song'' and the infamous 'RFC 748', the only document specifically marked in the RFC index with ''note date of issue''.
In the early 1980s, he became interested in electronic mail software and systems; ever since that has been his primary focus.
Prior to joining the UW staff in 1988, he was a staff member at Stanford University for 11 years. At Stanford, he was the principal developer of the TOPS-20 mailsystem, and still runs TOPS-20 systems at his residence.
★ List of programmers
★ Mark Crispin's website
In the late 1970s, he developed the first production PDP-10 32-bit address ARPAnet NCP for the WAITS operating system; prior to that time most systems only supported the original 8-bit addresses. During that time, he also wrote a series of Telnet implementations for the Incompatible Timesharing System, WAITS, and TOPS-20 operating systems whose escape behavior was immortalized by Guy Steele in the April 1984 Communications of the ACM as ''The Telnet Song'' and the infamous 'RFC 748', the only document specifically marked in the RFC index with ''note date of issue''.
In the early 1980s, he became interested in electronic mail software and systems; ever since that has been his primary focus.
Prior to joining the UW staff in 1988, he was a staff member at Stanford University for 11 years. At Stanford, he was the principal developer of the TOPS-20 mailsystem, and still runs TOPS-20 systems at his residence.
| Contents |
| See also |
| External link |
See also
★ List of programmers
External link
★ Mark Crispin's website
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