The story goes that if Sir Winston Churchill hadn't ordered all the equipment and documents at Bletchley Park to be destroyed after the War, then IBM would have most likely been a British company.
Given the long tradition of British technology firms to sell up - often to US rivals - before they reach any real scale, I remain somewhat sceptical about this theory.
I was interested, however, to see this BBC interview with Eric Schmidt in which he describes the UK e-commerce industry as ripe for incubating the next world leader.
Using the social media sector, as an example, and contrasting the fortunes of Facebook with the recent news that the once popular (and homegrown) Friends Reunited is finally being 'put down' - the omens aren't great. Having said that, I am taking a leap of faith and remaining optimistic... in Eric we trust - Happy New Year!
The UK is the world leader in e-commerce, former Google boss Eric Schmidt has told the BBC. Now executive chairman of Google parent company Alphabet, Mr Schmidt said there was no reason why a hundred billion pound tech start up could not be launched in Britain.