IBM's 1967 film "The Paperwork Explosion", bit of nostalgia,
followed by interesting essay

http://www.west86th.bgc.bard.edu/articles/paperwork-explosion.html# 


“The government’s laws and orders will be transmitted to the furthest
reaches of the social order with the speed of electric fluid.”1 Such was the
promise made by the chemist, industrialist, and minister of the interior
Jean-Antoine Chaptal in 1800. It could be said to signal a shift in the
West’s way of thinking about official recordkeeping. The idea of the
paperless office was born.

Media historians have long recognized the astounding versatility,
portability, and durability of paper, which is in many respects the ideal
material support. As a corollary, the paperless office has been dismissed as
a “myth” by social scientists, information engineers, and corporate
consultants alike, who predict that paper’s many affordances will continue
to make it indispensable.2 And a myth it is, but not (or at least not only)
in the simple sense typically employed in these contexts. The paperless
office should also be interpreted as a myth in the Lévi-Straussian sense of
the term, that is to say, an imaginary resolution to real contradictions.

What contradictions? We get a preliminary idea by examining a remarkable
little film, The Paperwork Explosion (1967). Commissioned by IBM, the film
was directed by a little-known experimental filmmaker named Jim Henson and
scored by the Raymond Scott, the composer and inventor who wrote most of the
tunes behind Looney Tunes, introduced the first racially integrated network
studio orchestra, and pioneered electronic music with such technologies as
the Orchestra Machine, the Clavivox, and the Electronium. Henson and Scott’s
collaboration explains, no doubt, the film’s considerable formal
intelligence and diegetic wit.3
[...]
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