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When Knowledge Transfer Goes Global: How People and Organizations Learned About Information Technology, 1945–1970

James W. Cortada

Enterprise & Society, 2014, vol. 15, issue 1, 68-102

Abstract: This article argues that an information ecosystem emerged rapidly after World War II that made possible the movement of knowledge about computing and its uses around the world. Participants included engineers, scientists, government officials, business management, and users of the technology. Vendors, government agencies, the military, and professors participated regardless of such barriers as languages, cold war politics, or varying levels of national economic levels of prosperity.

Date: 2014
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