BlueFlux writes:
> If this refers to the ENIGMA codes used by the germans, im curious.

It doesn't, but it's still worth being curious about.

> According to my material, it was a swedish mathematician who was first to
> break the ENIGMA ciphers.

If you're thinking of the Swedish mathematician Arne Beurling, he broke
the Geheimschreiber teleprinter traffic (in 1940) rather than Enigma. 
A small Polish team led by Marian Rejewski had broken the Enigma cipher
much earlier, in 1932, and they handed their break to the British in 1939.

>                           So, does this article refer to the ENIGMA ciphers
> or some other cipher?

The latter.  Tommy Flowers designed Colossus, arguably one of the first
stored-program electronic computers, expressly to attack the Lorenz-built
teleprinter called "tunny" by the British and Schluesselzusatz (SZ 40, SZ 42,
SZ 42a) by the Germans.  This post-dated the Enigma attacks.

-- 
        Jim Gillogly
        21 Blotmath S.R. 1998, 00:12
        12.19.5.12.3, 8 Akbal 16 Zac, Ninth Lord of Night

Reply via email to