Colossus The secrets of Bletchley Park's code-breaking computers

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Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2010-04-30
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

The American ENIAC is customarily regarded as the first electronic computer. In this fascinating volume, Jack Copeland rewrites the history of computer science, arguing that in reality Colossus--the giant computer built in Bletchley Park by the British secret service during World War II--predates ENIAC by two years. Until very recently, much about the Colossus machine was shrouded in secrecy, largely because the code-breaking algorithms employed during World War II remained in use by the British security services until a short time ago. Copeland has brought together memoirs of veterans of Bletchley Park--the top-secret headquarters of Britain's secret service--and others who draw on the wealth of declassified information to illuminate the crucial role Colossus played during World War II. A must read for anyone curious about code-breaking or World War II espionage, Colossus offers a fascinating insider's account of the world's first giant computer, the great-great-grandfather of the massive computers used today by the CIA and the National Security Agency.

Author Biography


Jack Copeland is a Reader in Philosophy and Director of the Turing Project at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand. A contributor to Scientific American, his books include Turing's Machines, Artificial Intelligence, and The Essential Turing.

Table of Contents

A Brief History of Cryptography from Caesar to Bletchley Park
How It Began: Bletchley Park Goes to War
The German Tunny Machine
Colossus, Codebreaking, and the Digital Age
Machine Against Machine
D-Day at Bletchley Park
Intercept!
Colossus
Colossus and the Rise of the Modern Computer
The PC-User's Guide to Colossus
Of Men and Machines
The Colossus Rebuild
Mr Newman's Section, Jack Copeland, with Catherine Caughey
Max Newman-Mathematician, Codebreaker and Computer Pioneer
Living with Fish: Breaking Tunny in the Newmanry and the Testery
From Hut 8 to the Newmanry
Codebreaking and Colossus
Major Tester's Section
Setter and Breaker
An ATS Girl in the Testery
The Testery and the Breaking of Fish
Dollis Hill at War, Jack Copeland, with David Bolam
The British Tunny Machine
How Colossus was Built and Operated-One of Its Engineers Reveals Its Secrets
Bletchley Park's Sturgeon-The Fish That Laid No Eggs
Geheimschreiber Traffic and Swedish Wartime Intelligence
Timeline: The Breaking of Tunny
The Teleprinter Alphabet
The Tunny Addition Square
My Work at Bletchley Park
The Tiltman Break
Turingery
Dc-Method
Newman's Theorem
Rectangling
The Motor Wheels and Limitations
Motorless Tunny
Origin of the Fish Cypher Machines
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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