During World War II, the British at Bletchley Park
(40 miles north of London) achieved a number of successes at breaking
encrypted German military communications. The German encryption machine,
Enigma, was attacked with the help of electro-mechanical machines called bombes. The bombe, designed by Alan Turing and Gordon Welchman, after the Polish cryptographic bomba by Marian Rejewski (1938), came into productive use in 1941.[49]
They ruled out possible Enigma settings by performing chains of logical
deductions implemented electrically. Most possibilities led to a
contradiction, and the few remaining could be tested by hand.
The Germans also developed a series of teleprinter encryption systems, quite different from Enigma. The Lorenz SZ 40/42
machine was used for high-level Army communications, termed "Tunny" by
the British. The first intercepts of Lorenz messages began in 1941. As
part of an attack on Tunny, Max Newman and his colleagues helped specify the Colossus.[50] The Mk I Colossus was built between March and December 1943 by Tommy Flowers and his colleagues at the Post Office Research Station at Dollis Hill in London and then shipped to Bletchley Park in January 1944.
Colossus was the world's first electronic programmable computing
device. It used a large number of valves (vacuum tubes). It had
paper-tape input and was capable of being configured to perform a
variety of boolean logical operations on its data, but it was not Turing-complete.
Nine Mk II Colossi were built (The Mk I was converted to a Mk II making
ten machines in total). Details of their existence, design, and use
were kept secret well into the 1970s. Winston Churchill
personally issued an order for their destruction into pieces no larger
than a man's hand, to keep secret that the British were capable of
cracking Lorenz during the oncoming cold war. Two of the machines were
transferred to the newly formed GCHQ
and the others were destroyed. As a result the machines were not
included in many histories of computing. A reconstructed working copy of
one of the Colossus machines is now on display at Bletchley Park.
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