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- From: karn@servo.qualcomm.com (Phil Karn)
- Subject: Re: Enigma, ULTRA
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.225705.8436@qualcomm.com>
- Sender: news@qualcomm.com
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- Organization: Qualcomm, Inc
- References: <1489@eouk23.eoe.co.uk> <1992Dec31.201639.12700@netcom.com> <PHR.92Dec31132238@napa.telebit.com>
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 22:57:05 GMT
- Lines: 24
-
-
- And yet another book on Bletchley Park and the Enigma is Kahn's 1991
- book "Seizing the Enigma" subtitled "The Race to Break the German
- U-Boat Codes, 1939-1943".
-
- As the subtitle implies, this is primarily about the German Navy's use
- of the Enigma, which was a much tougher nut to crack than the simpler
- Enigma used by the Luftwaffe.
-
- If you haven't seen an Enigma machine in the flesh, I recommend it.
- It really drives home the impact that the computer subsequently had on
- the entire field of cryptography.
-
- Among other places, you can find an Enigma in the British Science
- Museum in London and the Smithsonian Museum of American History in
- Washington (formerly the Museum of History and Technology). I first
- saw the one in the British Science Museum. As I stood staring at it,
- lost in thought about how the subtle properties of that modest little
- box changed the course of human history, an English woman and her
- young son came up and also looked at it. "What's that, mommy?" "Our
- soldiers used that in the war to keep the Germans from reading our
- messages." Argh.
-
- Phil
-