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This exceptionally rare Enigma Machine is possibly the finest example that has ever surfaced. Used by the Germans to send secret messages during World War II, this important four-rotor Model K ...
One of the remaining Enigma machines, used by the Nazis to encypt and decrypt messages during World War II, has sold at auction for £85,250. The machine is in working order, unrestored, and has ...
The highlights of the collection are two Enigma machines, which are best known for their use in sending secure German military communications during World War II. The standard three-rotor model ...
A rare surviving Enigma machine that almost undid the heroic efforts of the Bletchley Park codebreakers in World War Two is tipped to sell for £100,000. The German machines had three rotors, each ...
This spring, you can see German Enigma machines at the Museum of World War II in Natick, Massachusetts, the very kind that Alan Turing had to decode.
Normally, the Enigma machine involves three rotors but as Hopkins notes for this particular find, this model uses four.
This model uses Meccano parts instead to recreate the function of the original machine, with a set of keys similar to a typewriter which, when pressed, advance a set of three wheels.
An "Enigma" encrypting machine used to send coded military messages from Nazi Germany during World War II is going up for sale in London.
Make Alan Turing proud by crafting your own replica of the historic Enigma cryptomachine with this extensive tutorial by ST-Geotronics.
Three hundred dollars gets you a fully assembled model. What can you do with your Enigma machine? Well, you can break codes… and make codes… and learn how Arduino works?
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