CHilean ECOnomic
CIA
Sistema de INformaciĆ³n y COntrol
the Chilean Production Development Corporation
the Patria y Libertad
IBM
Stafford Beer's
Tulip chairs
Computer
Amazon
Walmart
the Chicago Boys.[11
Guardian
Cybersyn
Salvador Allende
CHECO
Opsroom
Stafford Beer
Synco
Fernando Flores
CORFO
Gustavo Silva
Cyberstride
Gui Bonsiepe
Paul Cockshott
Allin Cottrell
Leigh Phillips
Michal Rozworski
Jorge Baradit
Chilean
British
Spanish
Soviet
Bayesian
American
No matching tags
Pentagon
Santiago
Chile
economy.[10
The People's Republic of Walmart
time".[15
No matching tags
The project consisted of four modules: an economic simulator, custom software to check factory performance, an operations room, and a national network of telex machines that were linked to one mainframe computer.[2] Project Cybersyn was based on viable system model theory approach to organizational design, and featured innovative technology for its time: it included a network of telex machines (Cybernet) in state-run enterprises that would transmit and receive information with the government in Santiago. Since the name is not euphonic in Spanish, in that language the project was called Synco, both an initialism for the Spanish Sistema de INformaciĆ³n y COntrol, "system of information and control", and a pun on the Spanish cinco, the number five, alluding to the five levels of Beer's viable system model. The network of telex machines, called Cybernet, was the first operational component of Cybersyn, and the only one regularly used by the Allende government.[5]
As said here by Contributors to Wikimedia projects