Cobden
Practically Family
- Messages
- 788
- Location
- Oxford, UK
13,300. And the reserve not met!
Baron Kurtz said:I suspect this is important enough to defeat the FLounge live eBay auction ban. What does grandad have in the closet? Oh, an original (apparently) Enigma machine!
http://cgi.ebay.com/Legendary-German-WWII-cipher-machine-ENIGMA-1938-circa_W0QQitemZ270142870851QQihZ017QQcategoryZ208QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
Cool, eh?
bk
Naphtali said:Fascinating item.
The British began work on breaking Enigma, I believe, when a pair of commercial model machines were brought from Poland shortly after the war began.
***
Some additional books on this item, and its greater topic, that might be of interest that I have read:
Kahn, David, The Codebreakers, circa 1967. Excellent information, but the mathematics was nearly gibberish to me.
Budiansky, Stephen, Battle of Wits. Excellent information, but the mathematics was nearly gibberish to me.
Winterbotham, F.W., The Ultra Secret. This is the first book about Ultra. Prior to its publication, Ultra was highly classified. I believe publication date was 1974??
Baron Kurtz said:I suspect this is important enough to defeat the FLounge live eBay auction ban. What does grandad have in the closet? Oh, an original (apparently) Enigma machine!
bk
Naphtali said:Fascinating item.
The British began work on breaking Enigma, I believe, when a pair of commercial model machines were brought from Poland shortly after the war began.
***
Some additional books on this item, and its greater topic, that might be of interest that I have read:
Kahn, David, The Codebreakers, circa 1967. Excellent information, but the mathematics was nearly gibberish to me.
Budiansky, Stephen, Battle of Wits. Excellent information, but the mathematics was nearly gibberish to me.
Winterbotham, F.W., The Ultra Secret. This is the first book about Ultra. Prior to its publication, Ultra was highly classified. I believe publication date was 1974??
eniksleestack said:So my original post on this last night got deleted because...? [huh] Just curious, don't want to break any forum rules.
PADDY said:When I was on an army intelligence course, the little museum they had on site, had an original Enigma machine, and I remember being told how many computations this thing had (like millions!!). When the British captured the original machine off a German U-Boat and got the code books..etc, well, it was one of the major turning points of the war actually!
But not the sort of thing to have sitting on your desk at home. This is really best in a museum!
cookie said:Did anyone see that recent American movie on Fox that was about this with Harvet Keitel and that other goose that was in White Men Don't Jump?