filing cabinet
They were used for enigma machines. Enigma machine is a way German people sent messages in codes. A Enigma machine holds loads of codes. Enigma machines are like laptops but with massive buttons and in code form
The Enigma was used to decode the Enigma. The British decoders at Bletchley Park during the Second World War used brain-power to try to crack the German codes. That is, until they got their hands on an Enigma machine which the Polish had captured.
The 'enigma' coder.
Type your answer here... the action replay for the enigma stone is : Enigma Stone 94000130 FCFF0000 621118C0 00000000 B21118C0 00000000 20009E4C 00000003 10009E50 00000218 D2000000 00000000
His disappearance is an enigma that has given rise to speculation
It was the Enigma machine.
the enigma machine in the war room is basically a cheat code machine where you type in codes such as WHATYOUGET all in one word and after that youll have the option to turn the cheat off or on.(whatyouget really is one of the codes try it)
Japan's Code: Purple Cipher Germany's Code: Enigma Machine
They're not really. Ultra was a type of classifacation concerning information. While enigma was a ciphering machine the Germans used. The British had one during the war but did'nt have all the codes to use it correctly.
Polish intelligence acquired commercial models of the German 'Enigma' cipher machines and produced 'doubles'. When Poland was occupied, the doubles and other information they had on Enigma were smuggled to Britain and formed the base for cracking the Enigma military codes.
The Enigma was evolved during the pre-war and war time from 3-wheel model, up to a 6-wheel model. As such there were some independent research of the codes, and broken independently by more scientists. The earliest one was a Polish scientist, then UK and later in USA was invented a faster and more efficient method in breaking the Enigma class codes. So there wasn't an only one team and only a single leading scientist. The enigma machine had its different incarnations too. All methods relied on the bruteforce attack and known plaintext attack.
The first computer was called an enigma machine. It was made by the military for beaking enemy codes.