"From Fish to Colossus" tells the little-known story of the German Lorenz cipher machine and how its messages were broken at Bletchley Park during World War II. The Lorenz machine enciphered five bit Baudot coded teleprinter messages prior to transmission via radio or landlines. The radio messages were first intercepted by the British in 1941. A method of deciphering was devised at BP that depended only upon the statistics of a single message; this method led to the necessity for fast digital processing machines. The most sophisticated of these was Colossus, which required 2,500 vacuum tubes. By the end of WW II thirteen Colossi were in operation.
The development of the deciphering algorithm is described as well as the design of the Colossus and its predecessors. Most of the research material used in this book was either declassified in 1996 by the National Security Agency or was released in 2000 to the Public Records Office (UK).
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Ernest Cockrell Jr. Centennial Chair Emeritus in Engineering The University of Texas at Austin.
Author:
Memory Systems and Pipelined Processors
Jones and Bartlett
1996.
Computer Architecture and Implementation
Cambridge University Press
2000.
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