The files include operating instructions for the SG-41, encryption rules and key tables used during the closing weeks of the war ...
The computing factory that defeated the cipherIn Alan Turing's world, at Bletchley Park, there wasn't time to crack a PIN with brute force, as ciphers changed too often and lives were at risk. By Dr ...
Dr. Jean Munro worked at Bletchley Park during World War Two helping to decipher German Army and Air Force Enigma messages.
At Arlington Hall, women on the Venona Project exploited a Soviet cipher flaw to expose Cold War spies, a secret that remained hidden for decades.
In early February of 1943, Gene Grabeel walks toward a corner of a large, crowded room inside Arlington Hall near Washington, D.C. Around her, clutches of people huddle over tables and quietly rifle ...
“It was unlike anything codebreakers had seen before.… No one could break the German Enigma.” Imparting urgency and drive to a telling that begins well before WWII, Barone (Race to the Bottom of the ...
He had read a book about the Nazi occupation of Denmark and wanted to show the ''deepest respect and appreciation''.
During World War II, British women were factory workers, codebreakers, spies and air raid wardens. How did such roles contribute to the Allies’ victory?
At Hemel Hempstead History Society's talk 'Poles Apart' on Wednesday 25 March, local historian Roger Yapp tells the fascinating, yet almost unknown WW2 story of Polish wireless operatives, technicians ...
Mar. 10—Seventh graders at Boulder's Southern Hills Middle School want to help the school community visualize the Holocaust by creating art projects based on books they're reading in language arts.
For over six centuries, the Voynich Manuscript has resisted every attempt at translation. Cryptographers, linguists, codebreakers — even modern AI — have all failed. Some say it’s Hebrew. Others say ...