Breaking Hitler's Lorenz Code - Colossus, 1943: the world's first programmable computer

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  • čas přidán 17. 03. 2019
  • A video of a fantastic tour at Bletchley Park, home of the Second World War Code Breakers, showing the method of interception and deciphering of the first teleprinter signals in Lorenz code, and how the need to speed the process up resulted in the development of the world's first programmable electronic computer.
    I would strongly recommend a visit to Bletchley Park, Milton Keynes, UK. Take a whole day if you can as there is a lot to see. All the staff, the tour and guide and displays were outstanding.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 24

  • @MrDaiseymay
    @MrDaiseymay Před rokem +12

    For me, collossus it is STILL, an OVERWHELMING sight. What an impression it must have made in the 1940's. The Americans were stunned when they where told that Their first Computer had been two years behind Collossus.

    • @menotworking
      @menotworking Před rokem +3

      This American is very, very impressed by what the British did at Bletchley Park, as well as their outstanding developments in radar. I'm glad that the information is finally coming out.

  • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    At the end of the war Tommy Flowers (the creator of COLOSSUS) was personally awarded £1000 by the UK government for his pioneering work on the machine. This amount of money sadly did not cover the amount of money he had already personally invested in the machine's construction, but inspite of that fact he was such a good & decent man that he divided the money up amongst the team who had helped him. In the end, he was left with around £350. This was a decent amount of money for 1945 but not a huge amount for the man credited with inventing the modern electronic computer, and the saving of countless thousands of lives. It's hard to believe that Tommy would later apply for a loan from the Bank of England to build a privately funded version of "Colossus". His loan application was turned down as the bank refused to believe that his machine would work, because of the official secrets act they were unaware that he had already overseen the construction of 10 such machines during WW2.
    He was not allowed to speak about his work for decades after the war, and had to look on silently when the US announced that it had built the world's first electronic programmable computer in 1947... 3 years after Tommy had "COLOSSUS" up and running .
    Unfortunately for his "public profile" he wasn't a persecuted upper middle class homosexual. Then again I have the feeling that Mr Flowers was an understated quiet gentleman who didn't seek the limelight, in much the same was as Mr Turing. There were also many MANY others who received no recognition for their efforts, such as Bill Tutte, Gordon Welchman, John Tiltman & Max Newman to name but a few.

  • @CiceroLounge
    @CiceroLounge Před 3 lety +7

    Absolutrly brilliant video

  • @davidtuer5825
    @davidtuer5825 Před rokem +4

    There is another video on Colossus on you tube given by Chris Shore of the Centre for Computing History. Just enter Colossus in search. It is much more detailed and, actually, much more interesting with the names of the Mathematicians and Engineers who were responsible. It's also very clear.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před rokem

      The Fact that ANYONE, can explain this technology to any understandable degree, is a major acheivement in it'self. I'm in my 80's , and despite my limitations, was determined to buy and read ALL, of Alan Turings Biography., knowing full well, that the mathmatics and othe high level stuff would go over my head. I still enjoyed every page, and having visited Bletchley Park 20 yrs ago, ejoyed every minute. Obvisusly, this level won't suit everyone, but there are other's who provide all the HIGH TEC stuff.

  • @cigmorfil4101
    @cigmorfil4101 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Bet the student wasn't limited by the speed of the tape - Colossus ran at whatever speed the tape ran at (it used the sprocket holes as the clock to synchronise the whole machine). As a test Tommy Flowers cranked up the paper tape drive: at 9,600 cps the tape broke and flew across the room at 60 mph, so 5,000 cps was decided as a safe speed. I wonder how fast Colossus could have run before the valves were too slow to switch in time if an indestructible tape could have been made.

    • @cailco100
      @cailco100 Před 10 dny

      From the wiki, translating the 5k CPS to CPU clock speed would be an impressive 5.8 MHz. considering the computers that came after had clock speeds ranging from 5.3Hz to 2.25 MHz. it was damn fast for what it was doing. If the tape was made from some fiber or cotton-impregnated strips, I would guess he could have gotten its clock speed up to truly insane speeds.

  • @b43xoit
    @b43xoit Před 9 měsíci +1

    Frequency Shift Keying (FSK)

  • @danieljulioabad3226
    @danieljulioabad3226 Před 3 lety

    What about the uk machines enigma version ....?

  • @ChadBrickner
    @ChadBrickner Před rokem

    which part is the encabulator?

    • @BurlSolomons
      @BurlSolomons  Před rokem

      This is the grandfather of every computer ever made, your phone, laptop, imac, car nav, the lot.

  • @DraksCave
    @DraksCave Před 2 lety +1

    The sound on this video was very bad

    • @BurlSolomons
      @BurlSolomons  Před 2 lety +2

      You can only record a) The sound that is there, and b) using the equipment you have to hand.

  • @rysacroft
    @rysacroft Před 10 měsíci

    I wish someone had miked him up, the sound quality is awful :(

  • @paulcrumley9756
    @paulcrumley9756 Před 2 lety +1

    Area mike is a very poor sound source in this room. Very hard to understand him at times.

    • @scarakus
      @scarakus Před 2 lety

      That because his hearing is bad. When it's all running it gets pretty loud in there. lol

  • @danielmorris4676
    @danielmorris4676 Před rokem

    The acoustical characteristics of the room militate against the speaker's voice, thereby making him hard to understand. A different type of microphone might have made this video intelligible. As it is, thumbs down!

    • @BurlSolomons
      @BurlSolomons  Před rokem +1

      I don't generally attend museums with a selection of microphones. You can only film with the equipment you have with you.

  • @michaelpcoffee
    @michaelpcoffee Před 9 měsíci +1

    Colossus wasn't programmable.

    • @BurlSolomons
      @BurlSolomons  Před 9 měsíci +3

      It actually was, by any definition, and you can check this on Wikipedia or any decent academic website. Although the programme wasn't stored. Colossus was programmable via switches and plugs. It was not, however, a complete Turing machine