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They're cracking German codes at Bletchley Park again

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  • They're cracking German codes at Bletchley Park again

    Special kind of reenactment:

    For the first time in more than 60 years a Colossus computer is cracking codes at Bletchley Park.

    The machine is being put through its paces to mark the end of a project to rebuild the pioneering computer.

    It is being used to crack messages enciphered using the same system employed by the German high command during World War II.

    The Colossus is pitted against modern PC technology which will also try to read the scrambled messages.

    War work

    Colossus is widely recognised as being one of the first recognisably modern digital computers and was developed to read messages sent by the German commanders during the closing years of WWII.

    It was one of the first ever programmable computers and featured more than 2,000 valves and was the size of a small lorry.


    The re-built Colossus

    Enlarge Image
    The re-built Colossus will be put to work on intercepted radio messages transmitted by radio amateurs in Paderborn, Germany that have been scrambled using a Lorenz SZ42 machine - as used by the German high command in wartime.

    The German participants in the code-cracking challenge will transmit three enciphered messages - one hard, one very hard and one ultra hard.

    Speaking to the BBC, Andy Clark, one of the founders of the Trust for the National Museum of Computing, said radio problems had stopped the challenge getting under way on time.

    "The radio path has not been particularly good between Germany and here," he said. "We are at a bad point in the sunspot cycle."

    Signals had improved throughout the day, he added, and he hoped to get 100% of the ciphertext - the code - through soon.

    The Colossus machine will be pitted against modern computer technology that will also be used to decipher and read the transmitted messages.


    hand plugs in telephone cable on rebuilt Colossus

    Find out how Colossus worked
    Tony Sale, who led the 14-year Colossus re-build project, said it was not clear whether the wartime technology or a modern PC would be faster at cracking the codes.

    "A virtual Colossus written to run on a Pentium 2 laptop takes about the same time to break a cipher as Colossus does," he said.

    It was so fast, he said, because it was a single purpose processor rather than one put to many general purposes like modern desktop computers.

    Mr Sale it could be Friday before the teams find out if they have managed to read the enciphered messages correctly.

    Re-building the pioneering machine took so long because all 10 Colossus machines were broken up after the war in a bid to keep their workings secret. When he started the re-build all Mr Sale had to work with were a few photographs of the machine.

    In its heyday Colossus could break messages in a matter of hours and, said Mr Sale, proved its worth time and time again by revealing the details of Germany's battle plans.

    "It was extremely important in the build up to D-Day," said Mr Sale. "It revealed troop movements, the state of supplies, state of ammunition, numbers of dead soldiers - vitally important information for the whole of the second part of the war."


    Close-up of Colossus, Bletchley Park

    Timeline: Find out how Colossus fits in the history of computers
    This, and the other information revealed by the code-cracking effort at Bletchley, helped to shorten the war by at least 18 months, said Mr Sale.

    The Cipher Challenge is also being used to mark the start of a major fund-raising drive for the fledgling National Museum of Computing. The Museum will be based at Bletchley and Colossus will form the centre-piece of its exhibits.

    Colossus has a place in the history of computing not just because of the techniques used in its construction. Many of those that helped build it, in particular Tommy Flowers and Tommy Kilburn, went on to do work that directly led to the computers in use today.

    The Museum said it needed to raise about £6m to safeguard the future of the historic computers it has collected.
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    Blah

  • #2
    Does it run Vista?
    One day Canada will rule the world, and then we'll all be sorry.

    Comment


    • #3
      Probably not, because with Vista it wouldn't have failed
      Blah

      Comment


      • #4
        How did they reconstruct the logic of Colossus from photographs of the exterior?

        Comment


        • #5
          No idea, maybe the photos showed also the inner parts?
          Blah

          Comment


          • #6
            Somebody probably wrote a paper about it before it was built, so they reconstructed it from there.

            Comment


            • #7
              The documentation was supposed to be destroyed, AFAIK. It was a terrible act of technological vandalism, but driven by the fear of it falling into the wrong hands, Like a Ring of Power.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Cort Haus
                The documentation was supposed to be destroyed, AFAIK. It was a terrible act of technological vandalism, but driven by the fear of it falling into the wrong hands, Like a Ring of Power.
                Government policy can be so shortsighted …
                Modern man calls walking more quickly in the same direction down the same road “change.”
                The world, in the last three hundred years, has not changed except in that sense.
                The simple suggestion of a true change scandalizes and terrifies modern man. -Nicolás Gómez Dávila

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