alan turing
The code-breaking machine designed by Alan Turing, incorporating Polish mathematician Marian Rejewski's ideas, was called the Bombe. It was developed to decipher the Enigma machine's encrypted messages used by the Germans during World War II. Turing's Bombe significantly accelerated the process of code-breaking, contributing to the Allied victory.
Perhaps you're thinking of the Bombe.
Answer is "bombe".
Turing did not work on the Enigma, it was a German machine. However he did do some work on the British Bombe machines that were used to crack the Enigma machine cipher. Later he saw Tommy Flowers' Colossus electronic computer, designed to crack the German Lorenz SZ40/42 machine cipher. This inspired him after the end of the war to begin work on programmable electronic computers.
Turing did not work on the Enigma, it was a German machine. However he did do some work on the British Bombe machines that were used to crack the Enigma machine cipher. Later he saw Tommy Flowers' Colossus electronic computer, designed to crack the German Lorenz SZ40/42 machine cipher. This inspired him after the end of the war to begin work on programmable electronic computers.
Hitlers Bombe was created in 2005.
it was called the turing Bombe and was made by a mathmatition called Alan turing.
A bomb - eine Bombe The bomb - die Bombe
In French, "bomb" is spelled as "bombe.
Some suggest that the German "Enigma Machine" was the first computer, others believe that it was simply a collection of gears and dials that allowed for a complex encryption of messages and that the British "Bombe" machine designed by Alan Turing to decrypt the German messages was the first computer. But the question becomes, how complex must a device be before it is called a "computer"? For information about the turing machine: http://www.2worldwar2.com/enigma.htm
None at all. The Enigma cypher machine was a primitive electromechanical device that was entirely manually operated. It required 3 soldiers to send/receive messages with it:the typist that entered the message on the keyboard one letter at a timethe transcriber that read the message from the lights one letter at a timethe radiotelegraph operator that sent/received the messages in Morse CodeThe British initially broke these messages by hand, but later built electromechanical machines called "Bombe"s. Even using a Bombe it could take hours of manual analysis of a message before the Bombe could be setup and started. If the Bombe succeeded in cracking the cypher, it did not decrypt it but only provided the Enigma key. That key then had to be setup on a Typex cypher machine configured to operate as the Enigma did and the original message typed by hand into the Typex (which at least automatically printed it, unlike the Enigma).The Bombe was in no way a computer.
One can purchase a Bombe Chest at a variety of online retail stores. An example of a store which currently have Bombe Chests available would be the website Overstock.