bletchley britain
Photos: WWII codebreakers return to Bletchley Park
Photo Messages from the German, Italian and other hostile countries were intercepted by a web of wireless intercept stations around Britain and sent to Bletchley. On Sunday these women and more than 100 other... [07 Sep 2009]
2008 in film: From Gates' departure to T5 opening its gates
News In September, silicon.com took a look at the world's first electronic codebreaking computer, Colossus, as part of a series of exclusive videos exploring Bletchley Park, the former home of Britain's World... [12 Dec 2008]
Britain's classic computers: A silicon.com special
News While Bletchley Park may be best known for housing the Enigma code-breaking machine during World War II, the former intelligence facility is still home to numerous tech treasures in the National Museum of Computing. [02 Oct 2008]
Photos: Britain's first business computer
Photo This is the console for the Elliott 803 on display at the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park. The Elliott 803 was developed in the early 1960s and until 1965 it was the single most popular British computer... [05 Sep 2008]
Photos: A dip into Bletchley's classic PC archive
Photo The UK's cash-strapped National Museum of Computing is based at Bletchley Park, home of World War II code-breakers and the Colossus code-cracking supercomputer. The National Museum of Computing's Chilvers said: "Amstrad... [03 Sep 2008]
Inbox: Vista, Bletchley Park and Cuil
Comment The survival of Bletchley Park, the secret home to Britain's codebreakers during World War II, is under serious threat from extinction unless the government steps in to provide vital funds… Also this... [31 Jul 2008]
Bletchley Park future under colossal threat
News The survival of Bletchley Park, the secret home to Britain's codebreakers during World War II, is under serious threat from the "ravages of age and a lack of investment" unless the government steps in to... [24 Jul 2008]
Photos: The Colossus WWII codebreaking machine
Photo Bletchley Park was the secret home to Britain's top codebreakers during World War II. Codebreakers at Bletchley Park found the code was not completely random and that the correct wheel... [18 Mar 2008]
Alan Turing: founding computer scientist
News Winston Churchill once described Bletchley Park as Britain's secret weapon that won the second World War. During World War Two, Turing - an anti-war protestor in the 1930s - worked at the top-secret... [22 Aug 2002]