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By Tom Espiner , ZDNet (UK)
Posted on ZDNet News: Nov 16, 2007 9:06:00 AM

In an ironic twist, a British team operating a World War II code-breaking computer has been beaten in a cipher-breaking contest by a German.

In the Cipher Challenge, a competition run by the U.K.'s National Museum of Computing on Thursday and Friday, the cipher-breaking computer Colossus had to decode encrypted radio communications intercepted from Paderborn in Germany. Competing against Colossus, which took 14 years to rebuild, were radio enthusiasts from across Europe, who had to beat the WWII code cracker using whatever computing means they had at their disposal.

The winner was Joachim Schüth, from Bonn, who completed the task using software he wrote himself.

"(Schüth) cracked the most difficult code yesterday," the museum's representative said Friday. "We're absolutely delighted. He used specially written software for the challenge. Colossus is still chugging away, as we got the signals late. Yesterday the atmospheric conditions were such that we couldn't get good signals."

Photos: A 'Cipher Challenge' for Colossus

The team operating Colossus managed to intercept the radio signals early on Friday, before loading the paper tape containing the encoded cipher stream. At the time of writing, the tape was still running, and the team expected to break the cipher later on Friday.

Schüth had "been much quicker and done a stunningly good job," said the museum's representative. Few technical details were available at the time of writing about the systems or software used to break the cipher, although the representative said Schüth had used the Ada programming language. Ada is used for military systems and was created by the U.S. Department of Defense in 1980.

Anthony Sale, the head of the team that rebuilt Colossus, said that the transmitted text had been encrypted using a Lorenz teleprinter cipher machine, the same type of machine which was used by Germany for high-level communications in WWII.

Tom Espiner of ZDNet UK reported from London.

©2007 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. CNET , CNET.com , and the CNET logo are registered trademarks of CNET Networks, Inc. Used by permission.

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Coding
I think the "wow" is in how he quickly and single-handedly coded his own solution to the problem. Doesn't really have anything to do with the hardware.

Yea, though, this isn't front page news. hehe... (Read the rest)
Posted by: TBolt Posted on: 11/18/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
And this is surprising why?  shagbark | 11/17/07
Coding  TBolt | 11/18/07

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