Bletchley Park, home of the UK's war-time code-breaking efforts, has awarded CyberEPQs to the first 60 students to complete its online cyber-security course. The CyberEPQ (Extended Project ...
Women operate the Colossus computer at Bletchley Park in 1945 - rex/shutterstock/rex features GCHQ has revealed the early idea for an “entirely different machine” which became the first Bletchley Park ...
As the Allied cryptanalysis center during World War II, Bletchley Park was the site of the first industrial scale code-breaking effort, enabled by the pioneering work of luminaries like Alan Turing, ...
If you're any fan at all of computer history, you owe it to yourself to get down to Milton Keynes and visit Bletchley park. A pile of volunteers have managed to get Colossus back up and running, built ...
THIS compelling compilation of essays reveals how cryptologists at Bletchley Park broke some of the toughest Nazi codes using the world’s first valve-based computer. It is technical, not for the faint ...
In the past few months, researchers from the National Museum of Computing (TNMOC) have uncovered detailed intelligence of Germany’s Lorenz messages decrypted with the help of the Colossus machine ...
The survival of Bletchley Park, the secret home to Britain's codebreakers during World War II, is under serious threat from the "ravages of age and a lack of investment" unless the government steps in ...
BLETCHLEY, England--The list of important sites is endless: Omaha Beach, Dunkirk, London, Paris, Toulon. But if you're a real World War II aficionado, you may think of Bletchley Park with special ...
Hacking the Nazis: The secret story of the women who broke Hitler’s codes Your email has been sent Of the 10,000-plus staff at the Government Code and Cypher School during World War II, two-thirds ...
Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with content, and download exclusive resources. Vivek Yadav, an engineering manager from ...
I spent a day last week at Bletchley Park, about an hour north of London. As I think is now well known, during the Second World War this was where a team of smart people, notably Alan Turing, broke ...