Matchmaker.com originated from a
bulletin board system created by Gregory Scott Smith in San Antonio, Texas in March 1983. It began as a dial-up system running on a single
Apple II+ with a modem. Shortly afterwards, it was ported to a Microsoft
Xenix–based Tandy 6000 microcomputer and re-written in
MBASIC, and then re-written again in
C by programmer Jon Boede. It was originally conceived as a pen-pal network for everyone. There were no membership fees and the system operated on user donations. In 1985, the system was relocated to
Houston, Texas and operated on four dial-up lines. The following year, two other systems were networked and allowed users in
San Antonio, Texas and
San Jose, California to join the "date-a-base". The original site started in 1986 was in the form of a
bulletin board system. Each system catered to a geographic area (code) allowing users to find like interests. The original BBS based system only catered to local computer savvy users within a local telephone area code. However, exchange of email between systems and profiles was later implemented using
sendmail and
uuencoding making
uucp and, ultimately the internet, the Matchmaker network backbone. The Matchmaker network was featured in the first edition of "!%@:: a directory of electronic mail addressing and networks" as one of the larger email networks prior to the rise of the Internet. In 1987, the software became available to franchise from the programmer, Jon Boede. The number of local systems grew to about a dozen, and became funded by user subscriptions. This business model allowed for each system to be moved into a commercial office environment for stability. In late 1992, the
ASCII BBS style was extended to also be a
telnet-based service, allowing access from anywhere in the world without the need for telephone long-distance charges. A year later, the web-based front end was created. The first Matchmaker system to receive the new version was the largest of the communities at the time, "Christie's Matchmaker" (see below). Other Matchmaker franchises quickly also adopted the web based front-end. The site went online in 1996. Phil Moerschell, a founder and owner of multiple matchmaker franchises at the time, acquired the domain 'matchmaker.com' and began using it to link to the 15 matchmaker sites he was running. In February 2006, the site was purchased by Avalanche, LLC. In 2016, the service was shut down and the Internet domain now belongs to a different business. ==See also==