Message Handling System

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Message Handling System (MHS) is an important early email protocol developed by Action Technologies, Inc. (ATI) in 1986. Novell licensed it in 1988 then later bought it.

Role as a gateway

MHS was a very 'open' system, and this, with Novell's encouragement, made it popular in the early 1990s as a 'glue' between not only the proprietary email systems of the day such as PROFS, SNADS, MCI, 3+Mail, cc:Mail, Para-Mail and Microsoft Mail, but also the competing standards-based SMTP and X.400. By 1996 it was very clear that SMTP over the Internet would take over this role.

Work-alike products

A compatible family of products from Infinite Technologies (now Captaris) and marketed under the name Connect2[1] were also very widely used as part of MHS-based email networks.

Email clients

  • Para-Mail - Paradox Development introduced version 2.0 along with Novell at Comdex 1986.
  • DaVinci Email - The first Microsoft Windows-based email client, and used MHS natively.
  • MacAccess - An Apple Macintosh MHS-base email client.

Decline

Novell became increasingly less supportive after their 1994 purchase of WordPerfect as they worked to transform WordPerfect Office into GroupWise.

At about the same time, confidence in the future of X.400 collapsed and SMTP email across the public internet became the compelling choice for mail between unrelated organisations, replacing MHS's former "glue" role.

References

Para-Mail from Paradox Development Corporation was the first email package to be brought into Novell and MHS. Paradox Development Corporation introduced Para-Mail version 2.0 with Novell at Comdex 1986.

  1. "...offers improved performance, greater reliability and much more flexibility in everything from communications hardware to scheduling...", 03/07/94, Mark Gibbs, Network World
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links