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 ...
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, ...
GCHQ has revealed the early idea for an “entirely different machine” which became the first Bletchley Park code-breaking computer. To celebrate Thursday’s 80th anniversary of Colossus, the ...
A reconstruction of a major piece of cybernetic history and the precursor to Colossus, the world's first programmable electronic digital computer, has made its public debut at the National Museum of ...
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 ...
"I was given one sentence, 'We are breaking German codes, end of story'." It was Ruth Bourne's first job out of college, when, like thousands of other young British women during World War II, she was ...
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 ...
Britain's hush hush Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) intelligence and security organization has released new images never before made public of Colossus, the world's first digital ...
In honor of the 80th anniversary of the development of Colossus — arguably the first programmable computer ever made — the U.K. intelligence and security organization known as the Government ...
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 ...
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