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| | Ray Tomlinson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Raymond Tomlinson (born 1941) is a programmer who implemented an email system in 1971. |  | | Tomlinson adapted a program called SNDMSG, which sent messages to other users of a time-sharing computer to run on TENEX. |  | | At MIT, Tomlinson worked in the Speech Communication Group and developed an analog-digital hybrid speech synthesizer as the subject of his Master's thesis. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Tomlinson
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| | Commentary: The Birth of e-mail from Bill Hammack's Engineering & Life Radio Program |
 | | Ray Tomlinson, who worked on two of the computers stored in New England, was in the habit of leaving messages for his co-workers on the computer. |  | | Tomlinson explained in his message, that each user needed to distinguish messages intended only for their local computer from those headed out into the computer network. |  | | Tomlinson realized it would be useful to send messages to the engineers working at computers in other states. |
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http://www.engineerguy.com/comm/3486.htm
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| | Innovation Odyssey - The Technology Trail |
 | | Tomlinson, a principal scientist at Bolt, Beranek and Newman, was developing an electronic mailbox program which allowed programmers working on the same computer to leave messages for one another. |  | | In late 1971, Tomlinson was sending messages from one computer to another in his lab in Cambridge. |  | | Tomlinson had also worked on a mail program called CPYNET which could send and receive files, but did not allow users to add any information as SNDMSG did. |
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http://www.innovationodyssey.com/email.htm
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| | BBC News DOT LIFE H@ppy birthday to you |
 | | Mr Tomlinson has been called the father of e-mail because, back in 1971, he invented the software that allowed messages to be sent between computers. |  | | Ray Tomlinson can't recall his first e-mail either but, with due respect to yourself, it was certainly more significant. |  | | Ray Tomlinson made it possible to swap messages between machines in different locations; between universities, across continents, and oceans. |
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/sci_tech/2000/dot_life/1586229.stm
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| | Alumni Hall of Fame: Raymond S. Tomlinson |
 | | Ray Tomlinson '63 received the George R. Stibitz Computer Pioneer Award from the American Computer Museum in April 2000, almost 30 years after he wrote what has been called the "killer application" of the Internet. |  | | In 1971 he was an engineer for Bolt Beranek and Newman, which had won the contract to create ARPANET, a communication network that would allow scientists and researchers to share each other's computer facilities. |  | | Credited with inventing network electronic mail, Tomlinson is the man who put the @ sign in e-mail. |
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http://www.rpi.edu/dept/NewsComm/sub/fame/inductees/raymondtomlinson.html
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| | Who is Ray Tomlinson |
 | | It was Ray Tomlinson a Computer Science graduate of MIT that first invented e-mail. |  | | It was here that Ray Tomlinson found him self helping develop SNDMSG which was a program that made text files and sent them to another mail box on the same computer. |  | | He also found him self helping out with another protocol called CYPNET which dealt with sending files from one computer to another on the APRANET. |
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http://www.rit.edu/~wbp4667/WhoIsRayTomlinson.html
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| | E-mail is now 30 years young |
 | | Tomlinson, principal engineer at Cambridge, Mass.-based BBN Technologies, finds himself in the spotlight again after all these years, having to answer questions about the computer program he designed as it reaches its 30th birthday in the coming weeks. |  | | For example, the message program only enabled a user to send a communique to a colleague's mailbox as long as that mailbox was located on the same computer as the sender's. |  | | It wasn't until the personal computer boom in the mid-1980s that e-mail trickled into the lives of computer enthusiasts and university students. |
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http://www.ciol.com/content/news/trends/101100501.asp
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| | Ray Tomlinson - Inventor of e-mail - Magazine - Darwin Online for Informed Executives |
 | | But Ray Tomlinson, the computer engineer who first discovered the means to send a message from one computer to another across a network, clearly had other things on his mind. |  | | At the same time he was testing a file transfer program (CYPNET) that would allow users to send files to remote computers linked to ARPANET. |  | | At the time, he was working for Cambridge, Mass.-based BBN Technologies, the company that developed ARPANET, the forerunner of the Internet. |
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http://www.darwinmag.com/read/010102/buzz_mover.html
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| | Tech Tidbit -- June 2004 |
 | | Tomlinson came up with the notion of combining this program with another program that transferred files among ARPANET computers around the country in order to send messages among these networked computers. |  | | "Ray Tomlinson: Inventor of e-mail." An interesting profile with references. |  | | "Ray Tomlinson: Inventor of e-mail," by Daintry Duffy, Darwin Magazine (January 2002). |
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http://www.alteich.com/tidbits/t060104.htm
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| | INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS |
 | | Once Tomlinson figured out how to move mail from one computer to another, his next task was to make sure the message went to the right machine. |  | | “When Ray came up with this electronic host-to-host e-mail demo over a weekend, my first reaction was, maybe we shouldn’t tell anybody,” says Jerry Burchfiel, a network architect at BBN who was working at the time with Tomlinson on a new operating system for ARPA, the Department of Defense’s Advanced Research Projects Agency. |  | | E-mail is the back fence of the computer age, and we’re all leaning over and chatting. |
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http://www.chenaultsystems.com/articles/Intell33.htm
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| | Rensselaer Magazine - September 2000 |
 | | It occurred to Tomlinson that the message program might be merged with another program developed for transferring files among the far-flung ARPANET computers. |  | | Ray Tomlinson '63 wrote the "Killer Application" known as e-mail. |  | | In the fall of 1971 he was making improvements to a mail program that let programmers and researchers leave messages for each other on an ARPANET computer at BBN. |
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http://www.rpi.edu/dept/NewsComm/Magazine/Sep00/Pioneers.html
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| | BBN Technologies |
 | | Tomlinson had already written a mail program for TENEX that, by this time, was running on most machines on the ARPANET. |  | | Ray Tomlinson, a Principal Scientist at BBN, sent the first network email in 1971. |  | | Tomlinson had also worked on an experimental file transfer protocol called CPYNET. |
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http://www.bbn.com/Historical_Highlights/Email.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | Berners-Lee, e-mail inventor Ray Tomlinson and Apple Computer co-founder Steve Wozniak were in Bozeman Friday as guests at an annual event celebrating computers sponsored by the American Computer Museum, which is located here. |  | | He also noted that the @ sign is the only preposition on a computer and e-mail signified a person at a computer. |  | | He just made it so a person at one computer could send a message to a person at another computer. |
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http://www.billingsgazette.com/region/20000429_r0geeks.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | Tomlinson notes that intra-computer email was "popular among those who were regular time-shared computer users."[21] Seen in this light, sending email over the ARPA network in 1971 was, as Tomlinson puts it, "a natural extension" to the existing functionality of intra-computer email systems of the 1960's. |  | | Tomlinson derived the network version of SNDMSG from two preexisting software utilities. |  | | "The first message," Tomlinson recounts, "was sent from myself on one computer to myself on another computer and its content was completely forgettable; probably 'qwertyuiop' or 'Testing 1-2-3.'"[18] The second message, sent out to other users of the network, was somewhat more interesting. |
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http://www.ifla.org/documents/internet/hari1.txt
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| | History Of Email - The First Message |
 | | Ray was assigned to make this simple application do a little bit more. |  | | In 1971, an engineer named Ray Tomlinson was assigned to a project called SNDMSG. |  | | ARPANET stands for Advanced Research Projects Agency Network, and it's purpose was to create a method that military and educational institutions could communicate with each other. |
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http://www.mailmsg.com/history.htm
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| | Email History, How Email Was Invented |
 | | In the early 1970's, Ray Tomlinson was working on a small team developing the TENEX operating system, with local email programs called SNDMSG and READMAIL. |  | | In late 1971, Tomlinson developed the first ARPANET email application when he updated SNDMSG by adding a program called CPYNET capable of copying files over the network, and informed his colleagues by sending them an email using the new program with instructions on how to use it. |  | | However, these early systems were limited to use by the group of people using one computer. |
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http://www.livinginternet.com/e/ei.htm
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| | PR Newswire: Discover Magazine Awards '2002 Innovation' Honor to Ray Tomlinson of Verizon's BBN Technologies; E-Mail ... |
 | | Tomlinson invented e-mail in 1971 while he was working on computer networking for BBN. |  | | Discover Magazine Awards '2002 Innovation' Honor to Ray Tomlinson of Verizon's BBN Technologies; E-Mail Inventor and Internet Pioneer Honored Along With Four Other Scientists at National Press Club Event. |  | | PR Newswire: Discover Magazine Awards '2002 Innovation' Honor to Ray Tomlinson of Verizon's BBN Technologies; E-Mail Inventor and Internet Pioneer Honored Along With Four Other Scientists at National Press Club Event.@ HighBeam Research |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?docid=1G1:87472591&refid=ink_tptd_nw
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| | Present at the 'e'-creation Newsmakers CNET News.com |
 | | Tomlinson and his co-workers were assigned to find uses for the newly developed ARPAnet, the precursor to today's Internet. |  | | Q: E-mail has become so central to the Internet it may be hard for some people to imagine a computer network without it. |  | | E-mail found its way into the mainstream more than 20 years later with the advent of the personal computer and then the World Wide Web, which popularized the Internet. |
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http://news.com.com/2008-1082-274161.html?legacy=cnet
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| | The History of the Internet |
 | | The first e-mail program was created by Ray Tomlinson of BBN. |
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http://www.davesite.com/webstation/net-history.shtml
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| | VectorInter.Net NewsLetter archive |
 | | In March of 1972, Ray modified his new program for use on ARPANET, which was the precursor to what we now call the Internet. |  | | He was doing university computer research with large mainframe computers. |  | | The original program Ray wrote was derived from two others: an intra-machine announcement program called SENDMSG and an experimental file transfer program called CPYNET. |
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http://www.vectorinter.net/news/pages/who_invented_@_symbol_htm
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| | Cougaar' agent locked up |
 | | Ray Ray Tomlinson wrote: > This is issue has been the subject of a number of revisions of the > code and it appears that it is still not correct. |  | | I was misled into thinking the problem had not been fixed because the source tree I was looking at was actually the 9.6 source tree and it matches the current code. |  | | I think your > analysis is correct: A three-way deadlock has occurred. |
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http://www.cougaar.org/pipermail/cougaar-developers/2003/000784.html
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| | 100 days of thanks |
 | | Tomlinson adapted the programme and used the @ symbol to join the user's name and that of the computer used as a server, thereby creating e-mail. |  | | The SNDMSG program was used to send messages between the different users of a single computer. |  | | BBN (Creator of mail between different servers on a network) Ray Tomlinson has worked at BBN for more than thirty years. |
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http://www.100daysofthanks.com/quien.asp?id=3
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| | tr052300 |
 | | Ray Tomlinson addressed the Board regarding school bus violations filed with the Essex Police Department. |  | | Tomlinson stated his plans to address the Essex Selectboard as well. |  | | Tomlinson reviewed the statistics presented in the letter from Chief Horton, questioning why no action has been taken on some of the complaints (if the license number was incorrect, many of the cars are in the same place each day at the same time, so this could easily be investigated). |
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http://www.essexjunction.org/TR052300.HTM
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| | Email Page |
 | | In the beginning the program called "Eudora" was a commonly used form of e-mail, since it was usually included in the software package provided by the ISPs (Internet Service Providers). |  | | In October of 1971 a computer engineer, named Roy Tomlinson, sent the first e-mail message. |  | | Prior to his discovery, messages could only be sent to users on a single machine. |
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http://www.udel.edu/physics/scen103/XDGS/email~1.htm
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| | SNDMSG - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | SNDMSG was one component of a mail program written by Ray Tomlinson that was first used in 1971 for TENEX. |  | | SNDMSG was used for the purpose of sending Electronic Mail from one user to another, however, it was not capable of sending to different machines. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SNDMSG
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| | Los Angeles Business Journal: Revolutionary E-Mail Celebrates 30 Years - founded by Ray Tomlinson - Brief Article |
 | | In a recent inter-view with CNet's News.com, Tomlinson said he dreamed up e-mail while trying to find practical uses for the government-funded computer network that would eventually evolve into the Internet. |  | | What began in the last few months of 1971 as a simple experiment to test a budding computer network has evolved into nothing less than a communications revolution. |  | | But when Tomlinson dreamed up e-mail, he combined telephones and electricity in a way those better known inventors couldn't have imagined. |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m5072/is_44_23/ai_79791905
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| | RFC 0492 - Jerry Burchfiel and Ray Tomlinson of Bolt, Beranek, and Newman, Inc, have issued a Network Request for ... |
 | | RFC 0492 - Jerry Burchfiel and Ray Tomlinson of Bolt, Beranek, and Newman, Inc, have issued a Network Request for Comments (#467) which proposes a solution to two problems which have been annoying to Network users. |  | | Network Working Group E. Meyer Request for Comments: 492 MIT-Multics NIC: 15357 18 April 1973 RESPONSE TO RFC 467 Jerry Burchfiel and Ray Tomlinson of Bolt, Beranek, and Newman, Inc, have issued a Network Request for Comments (#467) which proposes a solution to two problems which have been annoying to Network users. |  | | This document will briefly describe the problems and proposed solutions, and offer comments and alternative suggestions. |
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http://www.muonics.com/rfc/rfc492.php
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| | Changes on Tasks |
 | | For example, if an agent is rehydrated from persisted state, there is no way of telling how any particular object became what it is. Its state is everything, how it got that way is unknowable and must be irrelevant. |  | | The >first one sends the changed task: > planning/src/org/cougaar/planning/ldm/lps/RemoteAllocationLP.java >and the second integrates the task changes into the remote copy of the task: > planning/src/org/cougaar/planning/ldm/lps/ReceiveTaskLP.java > >Todd > > > >>Ray >> >>Allen, Chris S. wrote: >> >> >>>I'm trying to solve a scalability/performance problem I'm encountering. |  | | Based on Ray's comments, I'm going to >rework my functionality to use PPhrases rather than DOs. |
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http://www.cougaar.org/pipermail/cougaar-developers/2003/000935.html
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| | A Conversation With The Inventor Of Email |
 | | Ray Tomlinson gave society one of the greatest communication tools in history. |  | | We're working on both Linux and Windows and it's written in Java so it's relatively platform independent. |  | | But consider that in this high-tech era there are more emails sent every day than telephone calls. |
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http://itmanagement.earthweb.com/entdev/article.php/1408411
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| | Ray Tomlinson - definition of Ray Tomlinson in Encyclopedia |
 | | Ray Tomlinson - definition of Ray Tomlinson in Encyclopedia |  | | Raymond Tomlinson (born 1941) is a programmer who first used the "@" symbol for sending email in 1972. |  | | This article is a substub, the first step on the way to becoming a full article. |
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http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/Ray_Tomlinson
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| | networked places: internet |
 | | Ray Tomlinson of BBN invents email program to send messages across a distributed network. |  | | Ray Tomlinson (BBN) modifies email program for ARPANET where it becomes a quick hit. |  | | ARPANET hosts start using Network Control Protocol (NCP), first host-to-host protocol |
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http://www.myholler.com/internet/seventy.htm
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| | Smart Mobs: Ray Tomlinson and the '@' symbol |
 | | Posted by Jim_Downing at 12:40 AM The Official Google blog says "it's difficult to pin down the exact origin of email, but in October 1971, an engineer named Ray Tomlinson chose the '@' symbol for email addresses and wrote software to send the first network email". |  | | Mobile communication, pervasive computing, wireless networks, collective action. |  | | Smart Mobs: Ray Tomlinson and the '@' symbol |
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http://www.smartmobs.com/archive/2005/10/22/ray_tomlinson_a.html
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| | Ray Tomlinson - OneLook Dictionary Search |
 | | Ray Tomlinson : Free On-line Dictionary of Computing [home, info] |  | | Tip: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "Ray Tomlinson" is defined. |  | | We found 2 dictionaries with English definitions that include the word Ray Tomlinson: |
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http://www.onelook.com/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/bware/dofind.cgi?word=Ray+Tomlinson
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| | Geartest.com - Columns - E-mail @ 30 |
 | | Sometime in late 1971 (he's not sure of the exact date) Tomlinson modified a computer file transfer protocol to work with a simple mailbox program and sent the world's first e-mail message from one computer in his lab to another. |  | | You've probably never heard of Ray Tomlinson, but odds are that you can't live without his invention. |  | | Then an engineer at Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN) -- the company the U.S. government's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency contracted in 1968 to develop DARPANET, which would later evolve into the Internet -- Tomlinson nearly suppressed his invention. |
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http://www.geartest.com/sections/columns/sk_email.html
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| | Internet Timeline |
 | | Electronic mail is introduced by Ray Tomlinson, a Cambridge, Mass., computer scientist. |  | | Designed for research, education, and government organizations, it provides a communications network linking the country in the event that a military attack destroys conventional communications systems. |  | | He uses the @ to distinguish between the sender's name and network name in the email address. |
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http://www.factmonster.com/ipa/A0193167.html
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| | The Virtual Museum of Computing |
 | | An Embedded History - Part 2 and Part 3 from Embedded Update electronic newsletter on embedded systems. |  | | The First Email Message sent by Ray Tomlinson (1972). |
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http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/icom/vlmp/computing.html
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| | Monster Striped Bass Challenge Anglers In South Delta, by Dan Bacher |
 | | When Tomlinson originally moved into Discovery Bay in the South Delta three years ago, he had little knowledge that he had moved to one of the best striper holding areas in the Delta. |  | | "I hate to tell you this, but you just lost a very large fish," said Ray Tomlinson as he checked the line. |  | | I finally managed to a land a quality striper, as well as lose the monster fish and one smaller striper during the afternoon session. |
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http://www.fishsniffer.com/dbacher/120601monsterbass.html
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