News
British codebreakers using modified British Typex cipher machines in Hut 6 at Bletchley Park, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire in 1942. Bletchley Park was the British forces' intelligence centre ...
Rare Nazi coding machine bought from British woman on eBay for £9.50 The UK's National Museum of Computing spotted ad last week on the online auction site for the rare WWII-era Lorenz SZ42 cipher ...
1941: British destroyers capture a German submarine, U-110, south of Iceland. The British remove a naval version of the highly secret cipher machine known to the Allies as Enigma, and then they ...
You never know what will turn up on eBay. Volunteers from the National Museum of Computing in Bletchley Park, England, found the keyboard of a Lorenz machine—a cipher system used to create ...
The teleprinter will join an exhibit on World War II code-breaking. The teleprinter part of a Lorenz cipher machine that was purchased by the National Museum of Computing from eBay for 10 GBP (14. ...
Rebuilt British cipher-breaking machine used in World War II is beaten in code-breaking challenge by German man who wrote his own software.
German divers have stumbled on a rare Enigma encryption machine used by the Nazis during World War II — and believe it was tossed into the Baltic Sea from a scuttled vessel. The divers, who w… ...
The World War II M4 Enigma cipher machine, ... Alan Turing, an English computer scientist and mathematician who developed the British code breaking machine, visited Dayton on Dec. 21, ...
The Royal Navy captured German U-boat U-110 on May 9, 1941 in the North Atlantic, recovering an Enigma machine, its cipher keys, ... On May 9, British destroyers HMS Bulldog, HMS Broadway, and HMS ...
Rebuilt British cipher-breaking machine used in World War II is beaten in code-breaking challenge by German man who wrote his own software. X. Trending. CES 2025: What to expect and how to watch ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results