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cryptography
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enigma
1915, two Dutch Naval officers invented a machine to encrypt messages. This became known as the Enigma machine. -
arther scherbius
1918, Arthur Scherbius, a German businessman, patented the Enigma machine. -
enigma machine
Mid 1920s, mass production of Enigma machine with 30,000 machines being sold to the German military over the next 2 decades. -
poland
The Poles set up a world leading crypt analysis bureau and hired leading mathematicians such as Marian Rejewski. -
marian rejewski
Marian Rejewski built his own model of the Enigma machine without having actually seen it. -
germans
In 1931, a German traitor told Rejewski that the Germans routinely changed the daily key indicator setting for the codes. -
connecting
To find the daily key, Rejewski build 6 replicas of the Enigma machine and connected them. -
the bomb
The new machine could run through more than 17,000 indicator settings. He called this machine, ‘the bomb’. -
how the bomb was used
The bomb was used to secretly read the traffic from the German Enigma machines for several years. -
britain and france
The Poles asked their allies, Britian and France to help them with the analysis and codebreaking of the German messages. -
germans adding
In 1938 Germans added two new roters into the Enigma machine. This made it harder for the Poles to read the traffic -
polish
The Poles asked their allies, Britian and France to help them with the analysis and codebreaking of the German messages. -
smuggle
The British smuggle out the Enigma replica machines two weeks before Germany invaded Poland -
british code
The smuggled Enigma replicas were taken to the British code . and cypher school at Bletchley Park. -
testing german codes
Alan Turing, a British mathematician at Bletchley Park thought of a different way of using the ‘bombs’ for testing the German codes. -
correct one
Turing used 180 ‘bombs’ which clicked round letter-by-letter, 20 every second, until they hit the correct one. -
code breakers
Hundreds of code breakers at Blechley Park worked round the clock to decipher the German Enigma communications they intercepted -
colossus
In 1943, British engineer, Tommy Flowers, created Colossus -
changing the code
Colossus changed the way code breaking was done from electro-mechanical to electronic – it was the first modern day computer -
tape
Colossus could read paper tape at 5,000 characters a second -
ww2
The Allied work on codebreaking played a key role in victories such as D-Day. It shortened the length of WW2.