Veteran Bombe operator Ruth Bourne unveiled an Enigma cipher machine, the latest addition to the Turing-Welchman Bombe Gallery at The National Museum of Computing (TNMOC), in celebration of the first ...
The home of World War II codebreaking has called for engineers to operate an electro-mechanical machine developed by mathematician Alan Turing. The Turing Bombe was a brute-force code-breaker which ...
Pour célébrer ses 100 ans, le service de renseignement électronique britannique a mis en ligne des simulateurs des célèbres machines de cryptanalyse Enigma, Typex et Bombe. Pour afficher ce contenu ...
UK intelligence agency GCHQ has celebrated its centenary year by releasing emulators for famous code cipher and code breakers used in World War II. Last week, GCHQ said on Twitter that the public can ...
It’s a good day for cryptography: The National Museum of Computing has raised £60,000 (and counting) for its efforts to keep a big piece of World War II and computing history on the Bletchley Park ...
Alan Turing oversaw the development of the Bombe machine, used to crack the German Enigma code The National Museum of Computing (TNMOC) has raised £60,000 in four weeks to house a replica World War ...
Computer historians have staged a re-enactment of World War Two code-cracking at Bletchley Park. A replica code-breaking computer called a Bombe was used to decipher a message scrambled by an Enigma ...
In the watch industry, we often hear tell of war stories as related through the history of pilot’s watches. But what about a watch that tells yet another kind of war story? Equally impressive and ...
The Enigma machine was a field unit used in World War II by German field agents to encrypt and decrypt messages and communications. Invented in 1919 by Hugo Koch, a Dutchman, it looked like a ...