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Comments on ‘How a pair of American spies created the Soviet Silicon Valley’

Espionage, affairs and PCs: Ahh, Zelenograd

Published Tuesday 15th April 2008 12:54 GMT

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And it was the British secret service... 

By Ally
Posted Tuesday 15th April 2008 16:15 GMT

that gave the Russians the secrets of silicon technology after the US had banned the technological transfer of the older Silicon Germanium technology. My ex boss was unwittingly involved

American view 

By Martin Owens
Posted Tuesday 15th April 2008 18:43 GMT

It's funny, you always hear how the Americans were a side theater in the world war in the UK; and in the American story you always get the impression that Britain was a silly little country that was save heroically by the US and never came up with anything useful: like Radar (Alexander Watt), the Jet Engine (Sir Frank Whittle) or computing (Alan Turing).

Very, very interesting! 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Tuesday 15th April 2008 21:51 GMT
Thumb Up

Can't way for part 2. History -- gotta love it.

Somewhat related 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Tuesday 15th April 2008 22:37 GMT
Boffin

This reminded me of another book presentation on computing before and during WWII: "Between Human And Machine:Feedback, Control and Computing Before Cybernetics". The standard Amazon template "Customers who were interested in X also were interested in Z" applies:

http://mitworld.mit.edu/play/20/

WW2 

By Mage
Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 12:33 GMT

The Russians and their Winter beat the Germans, not the USA.

The main US successes was in Pacific (helped by others). Really a separate war.

@Martin 

By Andrew Badera
Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 12:38 GMT
Stop

Radar? First effectively created in the US by Albert H. Taylor and Leo C. Young of the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory.

It was only..... 

By preethi
Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 13:34 GMT
Paris Hilton

me and my c**t that the americans haven't invented.

Kind Regards,

hope its worth the price 

By Stephen
Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 14:25 GMT

I bought this book based on this post! Bit expensive at £25 from amazon UK :(

Unlistenable 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Saturday 19th April 2008 18:57 GMT

Kill the damn background music. It makes something which should be interesting unlistenable.

Argh. 

By Jacob Lipman
Posted Sunday 20th April 2008 05:49 GMT

Fascinating episode, probably the best yet. Gimme part 2!

hmmm 

By dodgyedgy
Posted Sunday 20th April 2008 08:30 GMT
Coat

Very interesting stuff!

but in future you need to drop the BG music down by 3dB at least, its too loud.

cheers!

@Martin... 

By Ian Michael Gumby
Posted Sunday 20th April 2008 13:56 GMT
Unhappy

I seem to recall that it was England who cut off funding for Whittle only to re-instate it after the Germans started getting a successful jet off the ground.

And Mage, You seem to forget the simple thing called "Lend Lease program". Where do you think the Allied forces got their weapons?

Or the daylight raids on German factories?

Oh there is so much more... for something that happened a little over 60 years ago, it seems the world has forgotten so much.

Lend-Lease 

By Ishkandar
Posted Monday 21st April 2008 06:14 GMT

The American tanks "lent-leased" to Britain were so hopelessly outclassed by the German tanks that they were virtually death traps. However, the American, in their arrogance ignored the British requests for up-gunned and up-armoured tanks and went to war with the same models.

During the American landings in North Africa, the Afrika Korp shot up so many American tanks that there were wild exaggerations of the German strength to "explain" away their failure. The Americans were only saved by their possession of masses of artillery !! German tanks used to sit out of range of the American tanks and pot them one by one while the American tank ammo would bounce off the German tanks like peas !! The Grant and Sherman tanks could barely match the Panzer III which were already obsolete. They were out-classed by the Panzer !V which were being phased out and they were hopelessly out-classed by the Panther just coming into operation by then !!

The good thing from the Lend-Lease were the destroyers used in the Atlantic convoy battles !! Those were desperately needed and they did a sterling job fighting the U-boats !!

And, *NO*, U-571 did *NOT* capture the enigma machine that broke the German codes, no matter what Hollywood says !! Those codes were broken at Bletchley Park using a very early form of computing (IT angle !!) .

America did this British did that, blah blah blah.... 

By Michael
Posted Monday 21st April 2008 12:27 GMT
Boffin

Does that really size up what being British or American is? It appears to be people who, though completely unexceptional themselves, not only try to take the credit for people they happened to be born near but have a pointless argument about it, as though the nationality of the person who invents something is anything other than a completely insignificant fact.

You may as well say "Einstein had a mole on his left buttock and so do I..." than worry about what nationality he was and whether it's the same as yours.

All it says is, you happened to be born near the same area of land on Earth, where, completely coincidentally and unrelated in any way, someone, years before had a shag and conceived a child who actually did something.

Wow.

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