Early implementations The first Web Mail implementation was developed at
CERN in 1993 by
Phillip Hallam-Baker as a test of the HTTP protocol stack, but was not developed further. In the next two years, however, several people produced working webmail applications. In Europe, there were three implementations, Søren Vejrum's "WWW Mail", Luca Manunza's "WebMail", and Remy Wetzels' "WebMail". Søren Vejrum's "WWW Mail" was written when he was studying and working at the
Copenhagen Business School in Denmark, and was released on February 28, 1995. Luca Manunza's "WebMail" was written while he was working at
CRS4 in Sardinia, from an idea of Gianluigi Zanetti, with the first source release on March 30, 1995. Remy Wetzels' "WebMail" was written while he was studying at the
Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands for the DSE and was released early January 1995. In the
United States, Matt Mankins wrote "Webex", Customers who saw the cc:Mail demonstration were very enthusiastic, one recalling that they were "like an angry mob. People were yelling, 'We want this now!'". Matt Mankins, under the supervision of Dr. Burt Rosenberg at the
University of Miami, released his "Webex" application source code in a post to comp.mail.misc on August 8, 1995, Early commercialization of webmail was also achieved when "Webex" began to be sold by Mankins' company, DotShop, Inc., at the end of 1995. Within DotShop, "Webex" changed its name to "EMUmail"; which would be sold to companies like UPS and Rackspace until its sale to Accurev in 2001. EMUmail was one of the first applications to feature a free version that included embedded advertising, as well as a licensed version that did not.
Hotmail and
Four11's RocketMail both launched in 1996 as free services and immediately became very popular.
Widespread deployment As the 1990s progressed, and into the 2000s, it became more common for the general public to have access to webmail because: • many
Internet service providers (such as
EarthLink) and
web hosting providers (such as
Verio) began bundling webmail into their service offerings (often in parallel with
POP/
SMTP services); • many other enterprises (such as universities and large corporations) also started offering webmail as a way for their user communities to access their email (either locally managed or outsourced); •
webmail service providers (such as
Hotmail and
RocketMail) emerged in 1996 as a free service to the general public, and rapidly gained in popularity. In some cases, webmail application software is developed in-house by the organizations running and managing the application, and in some cases it is obtained from software companies that develop and sell such applications, usually as part of an integrated mail server package (an early example being
Netscape Messaging Server). The market for webmail application software has
continued into the 2010s. == Rendering and compatibility ==