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Google has posted a look back at Colossus, the world’s first programmable electronic computer. Created by Tommy Flowers at the Bletchley Park decryption center in England, it was designed to ...
The men and women who built Colossus, the world's first programmable electronic digital computer, gathered at the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park on Wednesday for a re-enactment of ...
The Colossus that beat the Nazis: Never-before-seen pictures of world's first-ever digital computer that remained a secret for 60 years after it was dreamed up by British boffins to defeat Hitler ...
The Colossus computer was the world's first programmable, electronic, digital computer. It was created by the British during World War Two to decipher messages between Adolf Hitler, ...
Colossus is regarded as being the world's first digital, electronic computer but the story of its creation is not widely known because it was broken up after the war.
British intelligence has released new photos showing the World War II era "Colossus" computer. It marked the 80th anniversary of the code-breaking computer's invention. The device's existence was ...
Tommy Flowers would no doubt be pleased if he knew that his most famous achievement, the building of the world's first electronic computer, Colossus, is still being celebrated 70 years to the day ...
Now widely recognised as the first electronic computer, Colossus was kept a secret for 30 years because of the sensitive work it did during World War Two to crack German codes.
The Heath Robinson, a reconstruction of a major piece of cybernetic history and the precursor to Colossus, the world's first programmable electronic digital computer, has made its public debut at ...
Silicon.com has posted a video and photos of the reconstruction of the world's first electronic code-breaking computer: Colossus. I spent a decade as a reporter and editor before joining the CNET ...
Nature - Colossus was the first electronic digital computer. ... 399–405; 200610.1038/440399a) starts in 1946 with ENIAC, “widely thought of as the first electronic digital computer”.
A reconstructed World War II-era British computer is trying to crack messages enciphered on Nazi hardware in an event sponsored by the U.K.'s National Museum of Computing.