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  1. ownership of Dehomag, with Heidinger retaining the remaining 10 percent.10 Through Dehomag, IBM’s tabulation technology found its way into multiple German industries and received commercial success. But Watson knew that in order to claim the German tabulation market as his own, he would have to win the German census.

  2. Dehomag held out that same promise of big-data to its clients in the Reich. In a speech to government officials (Deutsche Hollerith Maschinen Gesellschaft m.b.H, 1934, p. 39, translation mine), Dehomag president Willy Heidinger enthusiastically proclaimed the capabilities of the company’s technologies using nationalist Nazi terminology:

  3. Tabelliermaschine D11 DEHOMAG TSD (3).JPG 2,048 × 1,536; 1.97 MB. Technische Sammlungen Dresden - Rechentechnik - Hollorith Lochkartenablegeregal ...

  4. DEHOMAG is listed in the World's most authoritative dictionary of abbreviations and acronyms. DEHOMAG - What does DEHOMAG stand for? The Free Dictionary.

  5. Jul 1, 2002 · The Dehomag D11 essay describes not only its design, but also the historical and contemporary influences that led to it. We learn about the evolution of the D11s predecessors, and about the problems and challenges posed by the competing and preceding Hollerith and IBM machines.

  6. This paper examines how informational processing drove new structures of racial classification in the Third Reich. The Deutsche Hollerith-Maschinen Gesellschaft mbH (Dehomag) worked closely with the government in designing and integrating punch-card informational systems. As a German subsidiary of IBM, Dehomag’s technology was deployed initially for a census in order to provide a more ...

  7. Dehomag and other IBM subsidiaries custom-designed the applications. Its technicians sent mock-ups of punch cards back and forth to Reich offices until the data columns were acceptable, much as any software designer would today. Punch cards could only be designed, printed, and purchased from one source: IBM.