International Communities of Invention and Innovation IFIP WG 9.7 International Conference on the History of Computing, HC 2016 Brooklyn, NY, USA, May 25-29, 2016
Conference papers
The Code of Banking: Software as the Digitalization of German Savings Banks
Abstract : To the present day the history of banking software is nearly untold. While there is already some literature on the use of computers in the banking industry, most of it focuses only on the hardware and its restrictions (cf. Cortada 2006). The logic behind these machines remains untold. With the advent of the computer as a universal machine since the 1950s, business processes have been written into code, not hard wired into the machine. Furthermore, not the processor but the system software steered what was presented on the screen to the banking employee. Hardware got more and more exchangeable, while the real guiding principles of computing in action are to be found in software. This article analyzes how German savings banks used software to digitalize their business during the period of the Cold War.
https://hal.inria.fr/hal-01620141 Contributor : Hal IfipConnect in order to contact the contributor Submitted on : Friday, October 20, 2017 - 11:07:25 AM Last modification on : Friday, October 20, 2017 - 11:09:00 AM Long-term archiving on: : Sunday, January 21, 2018 - 12:58:38 PM
Martin Schmitt. The Code of Banking: Software as the Digitalization of German Savings Banks. IFIP International Conference on the History of Computing (HC), May 2016, Brooklyn, NY, United States. pp.141-164, ⟨10.1007/978-3-319-49463-0_10⟩. ⟨hal-01620141⟩