I would have gotten this around 1986 while at the College of Wooster. Honestly, I don't think I used that address very often for e-mail. At least, I don't recall using it much, although the details are a little hazy in my memory now. I don't have an archive of anything I sent and received back then. My earliest archived e-mail messages start around the fall of 1990, when I got an account on the University of Michigan's mainframe, and I think that account used the modern scheme for Internet e-mail addresses.
I got it to keep up with my fellow caver friends and join the cavers mailing list, a private list for NSS members who were actively exploring caves all over the world.
For my "computer", I couldn't see spending 3 to 4 k on a laptop, so I dropped $350 on a Brother Power Note and an rs232 modem, together they did everything I needed and wowed all my friends when I printed out a cave plot in the middle of the Mojave Desert on my tiny battery powered B&W printer.
I used my first Password in 1977 at work (private telco interconnect in silicon valley), it was DEVO, yes, I was referred to as the company's resident punk rocker service technician.
Later on I made games and my dad said the name looked trollish. So I switched my main email to (real name)@gmail.com
My second started in 1986, well before we had domain addressing, so a sender had to know 1) our corporate hostname, 2) my username, and 3) a well-known host to route through (like uunet, pyramid, decwrl, etc.)
The convention for publishing my address, therefore, was
{pyramid|uunet|decwrl}!infmx!aland
I was actually the first person in the company to put my email address on my business cards! I still have some from then.My first personal email though, was mindcrime@nccoast.net. This would have been about 1996 or 1997 or so.
Some things never change, huh?
mr hankey as the title of some southpark episode.
Didn't want to give out my real name back then. Won't give my name to any mail provider today.
pseudonyms forever :|