With increasing urgency, the question of how to manage economic affairs - both domestically and internationally - is being debated. In 1970, the Chilean government of Allende attempted, using the crude machina analytica of the time, to achieve a level of situational awareness organizations such as Walmart now employ with devastating effectiveness.
Recently, Bruce Sterling has been discussing a new type of conceptual object - the spime
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spime>
Spimes are objects that communicate their presence to the ubiquitous Internetwork (a spimed DVD player, for example, would stream information about its state and functions to a private or public network - making it possible for the owner/user to have a real-time understanding of the device's properties and operational health).
An early type of spime already exists via RFID technology which Walmart, UPS and other firms concerned with knowing where things are use to maintain command and control over the flow of objects (and, in Walmart's case, the conditions of manufacture and pricing point of objects).
It's possible, tentatively and theoretically, to marry the concept of the spime to the networked command and control platform of a Walmart - the fulfillment on a smaller scale of the Chilean Cybersyn - to imagine an economy of networked objects presenting information about their state, desirability and rising and/or falling price points to a distributed network intelligence platform (of the sort Google is building).
One potentital alternative to the current primitivism.
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Kazys Varnelis writes:
In 1970, Dr. Salvador Allende was elected President of Chile. Against the wishes of the United States, Allende and his Popular Unity government hoped to create "the Chilean Way to Socialism," La vía chilena al socialismo. Allende and Fernando Flores, his 29-year-old minister of finance (now philosopher and management consultant) were faced with the challenge of managing newly nationalized industry but hoped to avoid the top-down methods of the Soviet model. As a doctor, Allende was attracted to scientific methods and when Flores proposed a technocratic means of controlling the industry, he agreed, hiring on his recommendation British mmanagementguru/scientist/visionary Stafford Beer to create Project Cybersyn, a system with which to monitor the output of factories, the flow of materials, rates of absenteeism, and other indicators on a daily basis.
Through Project Cybersyn, Beer hoped to implant an electronic "nervous system" into Chilean society. The country would be linked together via a vast communications network to create what the Guardian calls a "socialist Internet." Finding about 500 abandoned TELEX machines in a factory, Beer networked these together to a provide input for software written by Chilean engineers in consultation with British engineers from Arthur Anderson called Cyberstrider that used Bayesian statistics to create a self-learning control system.
image: <http://varnelis.net/files/cybersyn2.jpg>
All this was fed into the Cybersyn Opsroom, designed by Grupo de Diseño Industrial, a government Industrial Design Group led by former Ulm School Professor Gui Bonsiepe. Although the room was never operational, it was understood at the time as "the symbolic heart of the project," to quote Eden Medina, a scholar who wrote her dissertation at MIT on the topic and presented the material at Bruno Latour's Making Things Public exhibit as well as in the catalog for the show.
In a setting influenced by the design of 2001, seven swivel chairs with buttons in the armreststhemselves influenced by Saarinen's Silla Tulip Chairswere clustered in a circle as advisors processed data from large projection screens. The armrests of each chair were outfitted with ash trays and spaces for drinks. Although there was no space for writing, which was prohibited, buttons allowed occupants to control the material on the screens and provide feedback. Since the advisors were used to secretaries doing the typing, there was no keyboard interface. Instead, large buttons, fit for pounding on, if necessary, allowed officials to make their decisions. But computer graphics was not yet ready for the job. The displays were not CRTs with computer generated data. Instead, industrial designers would painstakingly produce the diagrams by hand. These would be photographed and projected as slides onto the display screens. As Robert Sumrell mentioned to me, this proves that they had more faith in the computer than if they had actually had machines produce the renderings.
[...]
full -
<http://varnelis.net/blog/kazys/project_cybersyn>
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.d.
--------- Sì, il blog. È soltanto un giocattolo. Ma, è un giocattolo serio.