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The WWII Enigma machine is getting a 21st century update One programmer created a way to send and receive cryptic messages through code.
A rare surviving example of an Enigma machine , used by the German military to send coded messages during the Second World War, is expected to fetch £70,000 at auction next week.
WHAT: The international community of scientific machine collectors went all agog last December when Bonhams New York realized $463,500 for an intact M4 World War II Enigma machine. The result was ...
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 rarest surviving Enigma cipher machines has sold at auction for a record price of US$463,500. An artifact of one of the most exciting episodes of World War II, the fully operational ...
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.
The Enigma machine is a piece of spook hardware invented by a German and used by Britain's codebreakers as a way of deciphering German signals traffic during World War Two. It has been claimed ...
The Enigma machine is of course the cipher process used by the Germans during World War II. This Enigma Machine wristwatch is not only functional, but the appearance is modelled after that of the ...
The names of Alan Turing and the Enigma encryption machine have grown inextricably linked over time, owing to Turing’s contribution to British decryption efforts during World War II. It’s ...
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.
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