Are we looking at some sort of steampunk time machine? Not quite, but these clock-like rotors did help alter the course of history. The action took place during World War II at England"s Bletchley Park, a country estate that served as a top-secret facility. An assembled team, including the pioneering computer scientist Alan Turing, developed this device, known as a Bombe machine. It was instrumental in cracking the Germans" "uncrackable" Enigma code, which was used for encrypting secret messages in German war operations. The Enigma code was itself generated by a rotor-driven machine that re-scrambled the code each day—so the Bombe mirrored those mechanics to keep up with the changing encryption. Insights the Bombe and other programmable machines provided into enemy military plans helped to speed the Allies" eventual triumph—some even argue that the codebreakers" efforts won the war.
It s Computer Science Education Week
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Nesting season for the leatherbacks
-
2022 Winter Paralympics
-
A field of English lavender
-
National Hummingbird Day
-
Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes in Death Valley National Park, California
-
Chilling out in the Arctic
-
Antarctica Day
-
Cecropia leaf and lobster claw petals in Mexico
-
Autumn in Piedmont
-
Here we honor the women who ve served
-
World Giraffe Day
-
Everybody loves World Turtle Day
-
Storm rolls over the grasslands
-
Waimea Canyon and Waipoo Falls, Kauai, Hawaii
-
On the hunt
-
Happy Hobbit Day
-
Pumpkin patch
-
Tom Turkey takes Manhattan
-
A hero for the 21st century
-
Spring equinox
-
Dhaka, Bangladesh
-
Saint Andrews Day
-
Fallow deer, Bradgate Park, Leicestershire, England
-
Sandstone formations in the badlands near Caineville, Utah
-
Summer huts in winter
-
Ready for takeoff
-
Last stop before leaving the solar system
-
Wedded Rocks, Japan
-
Fall comes to the Last Frontier
-
International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

