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Alan Turing: The Enigma

darksider7Darksider7 wrote 01/17/2015 at 04:40 • 1 min read • Like

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Recently, just began reading Andrew Hodges new published paperback on Turing's invention, The Enigma. The inspiration came from the motion picture "The Imitation Game" which focuses on the machines early development. The author, Hodges, creates a schematic map of how it works and an idea of what's needed for parts and assembly.

Someone mentioned a magazine that focuses on the Enigma machines and the basics for any hobbyist or inventor. I found a handful of old parts, there more vintage in nature, the authentic, full metal and extremely heavy in construction (when completed...). I'm going all original, success is minimal, due to finding all the right components and working properly. The general housing is tough and considered expensive for most basic builds.

The electronics are in great need of, but in short supply, I have some of the small intricate parts like wiring, bulbs, and metal circular discs for decoding. In search of old letter and number typewriter keys for manual operation. I found in rather readable condition instructions on usage and control of the machine.

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jlbrian7 wrote 02/03/2015 at 00:12 point

i don't know if you have seen this but it can give you a feel for the machine. There is also a working one at the national cryptological museum that visitors can play with. py-enigma.readthedocs.org/en/latest/

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Darksider7 wrote 02/03/2015 at 00:31 point

Thank you: JBrian7 I'll checkout the link, sounds very interesting, I'm a huge fan of independently made docs so I'll be reading the column tonight.

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