The Rise & Fall of Email
door David Allan Edgar
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Over het boek
Experience an unparalleled journey into technology and science, battling legendary companies, pushing past them to be the first to bridge all of email together. Learn the theories that would topple the industry’s technical masters and wreck their plans to charge money for every email message. See the tactical strategies of companies like IBM, Novell, DEC, MCI, AT&T and Microsoft as they all maneuvered to take over email.
Be on hand as email develops into one of the most important forms of communication so critical that when email breaks down, everything collapses. Go inside the email world of the Associated Press, World Bank, Postal Service, Avery-Dennison, Danish Ministry, and many others.
Witness White House email from its construction to its disgraceful failure. Learn the details of the White House “Mail2 Problem”, the first Clinton email scandal. This firsthand account uncovers the real truth about President Clinton’s secret “Project X” plan to confuse investigators and cover-up an email conspiracy. Discover the possible real motivation behind Hillary Clinton’s private email server when she served as Secretary of State.
Calculate the real price of free email and how technical flaws in its protocol are subjecting all of us to terrible peril by allowing criminals, hackers, and politicians to go unchallenged rampaging freely through one of mankind’s most crucial forms of digital communication. What everybody needs to know about email and the dangers that lurk within the depths of its creation.
kenmerken / functionaliteiten & details
- Hoofdcategorie: Computers en internet
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Projectoptie: 15×23 cm
Aantal pagina's: 414 -
Isbn
- Paperback: 9781684186860
- Datum publiceren: ok 15, 2016
- Taal English
- Trefwoorden email, clinton, white house, scandal, history
Over de maker
David has 34 years of experience in the Computer IT community. He graduated from University of Maryland - University College with a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science in 1986. David started his computer career in 1982, at the age of 19, managing a microcomputer at Metropolitan Parts, the largest automotive parts wholesaler in the DC Metropolitan Area. David started his career in government contracting in 1986 by writing both the Operations and User manuals for the United States Information Agency IBM datacenter. He then coauthored the first GSA course in Computer Security in 1988. In 1989, David designed and constructed his first commercial email gateway MBLink, providing a bridge between DEC-based email systems and cc:Mail. The key differentiator was that MBLink was the first gateway that did not require address registration. It algorithmically converted email addresses and would change the future of email integration.