Cover image for Colossus : Bletchley Park's greatest secret
Colossus : Bletchley Park's greatest secret
Title:
Colossus : Bletchley Park's greatest secret
Author:
Gannon, Paul.
ISBN:
9781843543305
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
London : Atlantic Books, 2006.
Physical Description:
562 p. :L : ill. ; 24 cm.
Abstract:
In 1940, almost a year after the outbreak of the Second World War, Allied radio operators at an interception station in South London began picking up messages in a strange new code. Traffic in this new encryption increased dramatically and Bletchley Park codebreakers worked furiously to decipher the code that held the key to the secrets of Nazi high command. The codebreakers used science, maths, innovation and improvisation to invent an entirely new machine: Colossus.

Colossus was Instrumental in several extraordinary breakthroughs: It revealed that Hitler had no intention of abandoning Italy to the Allies; It revealed how much the Nazis had been duped by the D-Day deception (they believed the Allies would invade at Calais and were tactically unprepared for invasion at Normandy, so couldn't deploy tanks in time); It monitored the locations of Nazi military troops in northwestern and southern Europe; It revealed the degree to which Germans has succeeded in breaking Allied codes What these codebreakers didn't realize was that they had fashioned the world's first true computer.

When the war ended, this incredible invention was dismantled and hidden away for almost fifty years.
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