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Inventor who created modern email with the ‘@’ sign dies

Click to play video: 'Email pioneer Ray Tomlinson dies'
Email pioneer Ray Tomlinson dies
WATCH: Ray Tomlinson, the man who figured out how to send a message from one computer to another back in 1970, died this week. As Mike Armstrong reports, Tomlinson never imagined what it would lead to – Mar 7, 2016

Ray Tomlinson, the inventor of modern email, has died.

Raytheon Co., his employer, on Sunday confirmed his death; the details were not immediately available.

Email existed in a limited capacity before Tomlinson in that electronic messages could be shared amid multiple people within a limited framework. But until his invention in 1971 of the first network person-to-person email there was no way to send something to a specific person at a specific address.

Tomlinson chose the “@” (“at”) symbol to connect the username with the destination address and it has now become a cultural icon.

Breaking news from Canada and around the world sent to your email, as it happens.

While he was a holder of numerous awards and other accolades, co-workers say he was humble and modest. And, surprisingly, not a frequent checker of email.

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