Alan Turing. He broke the German enigma code machine around 1941.
That was the name of the first programmable electronic computer, and it was used to break codes used by the Germans.
The machine used to decipher German codes during World War II was called the Enigma machine. It was an electromechanical device that employed a series of rotating disks to encrypt messages. Allied cryptanalysts, particularly those at Bletchley Park, led by figures like Alan Turing, developed techniques to break the Enigma codes, significantly aiding the war effort.
The machine used by the Allies to break German codes during World War II was the Bombe, developed by British mathematician Alan Turing and his team at Bletchley Park. It was designed to decipher the Enigma machine's encoded messages, which the Germans used for secure communication. The Bombe analyzed potential settings of the Enigma and significantly accelerated the code-breaking process, contributing to the Allies' intelligence efforts and ultimately aiding in their victory.
They were the "Wind Talkers". They worked in communications in the Pacific. Because they used their native language, the Japanese could not break their code as they did with our other codes.
Hurtful
ultra
That was the name of the first programmable electronic computer, and it was used to break codes used by the Germans.
The computer Colossus was created to break the German computer codes. Plus it was Classified until the 1970s.
The Colossus Computer was constructed to help the code breakers at Bletchley Park, England, to break the German's Enigma codes during World War II. It was the world's first electronic, digital, programmable computer.
Colossus was the 1st electronic computer activity developed by the British to crack the LORENZ codes used by the German high command.
The first computers developed by British intelligence at Bletchley Park were designed to break the German Enigma codes.
The first electronic programmable computer was made by British Post Office engineers in 1942/1943 at Bletchley Park in the UK. It was made to break the Enigma (and other codes) used by the German armed forces during world war two.
it was called the turing Bombe and was made by a mathmatition called Alan turing.
WHO developed ICD codes.
Yes, the computer does store its codes in the RAM.
Alan Turing
I need to know the computer fault codes I need numbered bios codes and not bleep codes