Mail-11
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Mail-11 was the native email transport protocol used by Digital Equipment Corporation's VMS operating system,[1] and supported by several other DEC operating systems such as Ultrix.
It normally used the DECnet networking system as opposed to TCP/IP.
Similar to Internet SMTP based mail, Mail-11 mail had To: Cc: and Subj: headers and date-stamped each message.
Mail-11 was one of the most widely used email systems of the 1980s, and was still in fairly wide use until as late as the mid-1990s. Messages from Mail-11 systems were frequently gatewayed out to SMTP, Usenet, and BITNET systems, and thus are sometimes encountered browsing archives of those systems dating from when Mail-11 was in common use.
Several very large DECnet networks with Mail-11 service existed, most notably ENET, which was DEC's worldwide internal network. Another big user was HEPnet, a network for the high-energy physics research community that linked many universities and research labs.
Mail-11 used two colons (::) rather than an at sign (@) to separate user and hostname, and hostname came first.