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WWII Enigma machine sells for over half a million dollars at auction — one of the rare four-rotor 'M4' models
A WWII Enigma machine with four rotors was sold at auction earlier this week, achieving double its estimated price. Christie’s in Paris said the auction lot was “one of the rarest and hardest Enigma ...
As the June 6 anniversary of D-Day approaches, Boston’s RR Auctions is offering a sale of over 170 autographs and artifacts, with some focus on World War II relics, live on the house’s website through ...
The Enigma encryption machine developed by Germany during World War II was a pinnacle of its time, with the code being incredibly difficult to break. It took a monumental effort from Alan Turing and a ...
As the Nazi party rose to power in Germany, the German military made significant use of the commercial Enigma cipher device, which went on sale beginning in 1923. To make it more secure, they modified ...
NCR electrical engineer Joseph R. Desch led the Navy project in a race to decipher the German Engima code under intense wartime pressure. CONTRIBUTED | DAYTON HISTORY Joseph Desch, NCR engineer who ...
Alan Turing was one of the most influential British figures of the 20th century. In 1936, Turing invented the computer as ...
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Alan Turing was World War II’s greatest codebreaker. His private papers reveal a secret project
Newly revealed documents show that, while breaking Nazi codes, Turing was also building a device that almost changed military ...
The U.S. Army’s portable encryption machine, the M-209, is lighter than most of the machines here, but at 7 pounds with its case, much heavier than most smartphones. Its major innovation: a groove in ...
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