Don't hope to get rid of books (Umberto Eco)
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Management

19.99 €
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Management
19.99 €
Nineteenth-century history changed when Charles Babbage created the analytical machine, launching the cybernetic revolution, and by the 1930s, computers, the Internet, e-mail, and active networking were already available in Europe. Weimar, 1942. Here is the Office of National Security, which since the time of Wilhelm II has monitored activity on the global network and has access to all data ever created by citizens of the German Reich, be it bank transactions, meetings, e-mails, diary entries, or expressions of opinion on the German Forum. It employs programmer Helena Bodenkamp, the daughter of a surgeon and eugenicist famous throughout Germany. Her personal loyalty to the regime begins to crumble under personal circumstances and at the same time she discovers that her department head, Eugen Lettke, the son of a World War I hero, is beginning to use the system for his own purposes. Only neither he nor she yet suspects what new technologies are capable of in the historical conditions of 1930s-1940s Germany, and how terrifying technologies that seem so familiar can be.
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