Some were certainly women
because he did
Bletchley Park, near present day Milton Keynes, is where British code breakers worked during World War 2 and is where the German enigma code was broken.
Tommy Flowers developed Colossus in 1943. This computer was intended to aid British code breakers in World War II with analysis of the Lorenz cipher.
The Enigma was a German code generating machine.
Well they were the reason why we turned around and started to win in the Pacific. 9 code breakers, 7 from Harvard and 2 from yale, cracked the imperial Japanese naval code. With breaking that code it allowed the united states to set up the trap at Midway and we started to win in the Pacific.
because he did
During World War 2 the code breakers were based at Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire.
They were used as code breakers to aid the Americans during the war.
Yes, one of the most famous code breakers of all time was Alan Turing, a mathematician and computer scientist who played a crucial role in breaking the German Enigma code during World War II. His work at Bletchley Park, along with a team of code breakers, significantly influenced the outcome of the war.
They were young Navajo men from the Navajo tribe in the United States recruited to learn the Navajo code and conduct radio communications on the war front.
It probably was one big team. Like the NSA (National Security Agency), breaking codes required teamwork and that is how German and Japanese codes were broken. By American code breakers.
During World War II, code breakers played a crucial role in deciphering enemy communications and intelligence. They worked to crack complex codes and ciphers used by Axis powers, such as the German Enigma machine and Japanese codes, which provided vital information about enemy plans and movements. This intelligence significantly contributed to the Allied war effort, facilitating strategic decisions and operations. The work of code breakers, including notable figures like Alan Turing, was instrumental in shortening the war and saving lives.
Bletchley Park, near present day Milton Keynes, is where British code breakers worked during World War 2 and is where the German enigma code was broken.
There were no Navajo code "breakers" . That means someone who tries to figure out and unknown code. Native Americans who worked for the American side in World War II were sometimes called "code talkers". They used a substitution code to encode English orders using a native American language, mostly Navajo but other ones were used too.
Tommy Flowers developed Colossus in 1943. This computer was intended to aid British code breakers in World War II with analysis of the Lorenz cipher.
The Enigma was a German code generating machine.
ULTRA wasnt a group it was the code name for decrypted German Enigma enciphering machine messages the group was the Government Code and Cipher School at Bletchley Park, England made up of code breakers, mathmaticians, linguists