These sources all relate or contain information on how computing technologies could be applied in the workplace.
Remington Rand, “Efficiency is the Lubricant (1953)
Part of the Productivity Program was to create European study groups that would visit manufacturing plants of several different industries, so that they may study production sites and share in a learning experience…
Herman J. Rothberg, A Case Study of a Large Mechanized Bakery (1956)
In the mid 1950s, the Bureau of Labor Statistics took on a new study of the American workforce. As the demand for more knowledge of the ways that automation affected business increased, the Bureau started a series of reports detailing the ways that computing technology had been implemented in a series of businesses…