Robert Moon (postal inspector)
Robert Aurand Moon (April 15, 1917, Williamsport, Pennsylvania, USA – April 11, 2001, Leesburg, Florida, USA), sometimes called "Mr. ZIP", is considered the father of the ZIP Code or Zone Improvement Plan, a mechanism to route mail in the United States.[1]
Biography
In 1944, Moon developed the idea for the "ZIP Code" while working as a postal inspector in Philadelphia, although his system used only the first three digits of what would eventually become a five-digit and later a nine-digit system. The first Directory of Post Offices using five-digit ZIP code numbers would be published in 1963.[1]
gollark: I have a gaming one I'm fairly happy with, but I got it cheaply and actually play games on it.
gollark: Surely someone must have "gaming laptop but not gamer-looking" available.
gollark: There are presumably workstation-type devices?
gollark: I have been reading about the "XOR blackmail" problem. I really don't like this. We really need to stop things from predicting things somehow.
gollark: Yes, see RFC 9225.
See also
References
- Martin, Douglas (2001-04-14). "Robert Moon, an Inventor of the ZIP Code, Dies at 83". New York Times. Retrieved 2017-09-23.
Bibliography
External links
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