12-09-2022, 02:05 AM
Soviet scientists tried for decades to network their nation. What stalemated them is now fracturing the global internetÂ
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After the Soviet Unionââ¬â¢s leader Nikita Khrushchev denounced Stalinââ¬â¢s personality cult in 1956, a sense of possibility swept the country. Onto this scene entered a host of socialist projects to wire the national economy with networks, among them the first proposal anywhere in the world to create a national computer network for civilians. The idea was the brainchild of the military researcher Anatoly Ivanovich Kitov.
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In 1959, as the director of a secret military computer research centre, Kitov turned his attention to devoting ââ¬Ëunlimited quantities of reliable calculating processing powerââ¬â¢ to better planning the national economy, which was the most persistent information-coordination problem besetting the Soviet socialist project. (It was discovered in 1962, for example, that a handmade calculation error in the 1959 census goofed the population prediction by 4 million people.) Kitov wrote his thoughts down in the ââ¬ËRed Book letterââ¬â¢, which he sent to Khrushchev. He proposed allowing ââ¬Ëcivilian organisationsââ¬â¢ to use functioning military computer ââ¬Ëcomplexesââ¬â¢ for economic planning in the nighttime hours, when most military men were sleeping. Here, he thought, economic planners could harness the militaryââ¬â¢s computational surplus to adjust for census problems in real-time, tweaking the economic plan nightly if needed. He named his military-civilian national computer network the Economic Automated Management System.
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https://aeon.co/essays/how-the-soviets-i...idn-t-work
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After the Soviet Unionââ¬â¢s leader Nikita Khrushchev denounced Stalinââ¬â¢s personality cult in 1956, a sense of possibility swept the country. Onto this scene entered a host of socialist projects to wire the national economy with networks, among them the first proposal anywhere in the world to create a national computer network for civilians. The idea was the brainchild of the military researcher Anatoly Ivanovich Kitov.
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In 1959, as the director of a secret military computer research centre, Kitov turned his attention to devoting ââ¬Ëunlimited quantities of reliable calculating processing powerââ¬â¢ to better planning the national economy, which was the most persistent information-coordination problem besetting the Soviet socialist project. (It was discovered in 1962, for example, that a handmade calculation error in the 1959 census goofed the population prediction by 4 million people.) Kitov wrote his thoughts down in the ââ¬ËRed Book letterââ¬â¢, which he sent to Khrushchev. He proposed allowing ââ¬Ëcivilian organisationsââ¬â¢ to use functioning military computer ââ¬Ëcomplexesââ¬â¢ for economic planning in the nighttime hours, when most military men were sleeping. Here, he thought, economic planners could harness the militaryââ¬â¢s computational surplus to adjust for census problems in real-time, tweaking the economic plan nightly if needed. He named his military-civilian national computer network the Economic Automated Management System.
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https://aeon.co/essays/how-the-soviets-i...idn-t-work
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