User:Matt Crypto/reading bookmarks
Appearance
Turing
[edit]- Jack Copeland, editor, "Alan Turing's Automatic Computing Engine: The Master Codebreaker's Struggle to Build the Modern Computer", 2005, ISBN: 0198565933.
- Jack Copeland (Editor) , "The Essential Turing", 2004, ISBN: 0198250800
- Christof Teuscher, Alan Turing: Life and Legacy of a Great Thinker, 2003, ISBN: 3540200207
- D Leavitt, The Man Who Knew Too Much -- Alan Turing and the Invention of the Computer, 2005, W W Norton & Co Ltd, ISBN 0393052362.
- Jon Agar, Turing and the Universal Machine: The Making of the Modern Computer, 2001
- Ray Spangenburg, Diane Kit Moser, "Alan Turing: The Troubled Genius of Bletchley Park Hall", 30 Nov 2007, ISBN 0816061750
Colossus & Tunny
[edit]- General report on Tunny
- Fish and I — Bill Tutte
- F. Carter, Codebreaking with the Colossus Computer, Bletchley Park Report #1, 1996
- F. Carter, Codebreaking with the Colossus Computer, Bletchley Park Report #3, 1997 [information]
- F. Carter, Codebreaking with the Colossus Computer, Bletchley Park Report #4, 1997
- Davies, D.W., The Lorenz Cipher Machine SZ42, Cryptologia XIX(1) pp 39-61, 1995 [1].
- Erskine, R., Tunny Decrypts, Cryptologia XII(1) pp 59-61, 1988
- Fox, B. & Jeremy Webb, Colossal Adventures, New Scientist Vol.154/No.2081, 1997
- Jack Copeland, "Colossus: Its Origins and Originators", in the IEEE Annals of the History of Computing (26:4, October-December 2004), pp. 38-45.
- Harvey G. Cragon, Fish to Colossus: How the German Lorenz Cipher was Broken at Bletchley Park
- Usenet posting of a Colossus bibliography
- Jack Copeland, editor, Colossus: The First Electronic Computer, January 30, 2005, Oxford University Press, ISBN 019284055X.
- Anthony E. Sale. "The Rebuilding of Colossus at Bletchley Park," IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, vol. 27, no. 3, pp. 61-69, July-September 2005.
- Paul Gannon, "Colossus: Bletchley Park's Greatest Secret", ISBN 1843543303.
- Donald Michie, Colossus and the breaking of the wartime "fish" codes, Cryptologia, Jan 2002.
Enigma
[edit]- Breaking the Enigma code — Polish contribution to victory by Andrzej Dabrowa.
- Turing's treatise on the Enigma
- The German Enigma Cipher Machine: Beginnings, Success, and Ultimate Failure, 2005, ISBN 1580539963
- Jak P. Mallmann Showell, Enigma U-Boat: Breaking the Code-The True Story, 2000, ISBN 1557502021
- Gwen Watkins, Cracking the Luftwaffe Codes: The Secrets of Bletchley Park (Hardcover), 2006
Public-key crypto
[edit]Typex
[edit]- Erskine, Ralph. "The Admiralty and Cipher Machines During the Second World War: Not So Stupid after All." Journal of Intelligence History 2, no 2 (Winter 2002).
- Ralph Erskine, "The Development of Typex", The Enigma Bulletin 2 (1997): pp69-86
- Kruh and Deavours, "The Typex Cryptograph" Cryptologia 7(2), pp145–167, 1983
- John R. Ferris, "The British 'Enigma': Britiain, Signal Security and Cipher Machines, 1906–1946.", Defense Analysis 3(2) (May 1987): pp153–163.
- John Ferris, Intelligence and Strategy: Selected Essays, ISBN 041536194X, February 2005. Includes The British "enigma" : Britain, signals security and cipher machines, 1906-1953. "massively revised" version of 1987 paper.
PGP
[edit]Misc
[edit]- German cipher machines of WWII — NSA
- Patrick Radden Keefe, Chatter: Dispatches from the Secret World of Global Eavesdropping, February 2005, ISBN 1400060346. (Menwith Hill)
- Donald E. Mehl, Top Secret Communications of World War II: Unbreakable Encryption for Secret High-Level Conferences; SISALY - The Green Hornet: Secure Telephone Conferences; SIGTOT: Teletype Cryptographic System; The Beginning of the Digital Age. Raymore, MO: D.E. Mehl, 2002, [2].
History
[edit]- Jak P. Mallmann Showell, German Naval Codebreakers (2003)
Hervie Haufler, Codebreaker's Victory: How the Allied Cryptographers Won World War II (2003)- JIM DEBROSSE, COLIN BURKE, The Secret in Building 26: The Untold Story of America's Ultra War Against the U-boat Enigma Codes (2003)
Stephen Budiansky, Battle of Wits: The Complete Story of Codebreaking in World War IIWladyslaw Kozaczuk, Jerzy Straszak Enigma: How the Poles Broke the Nazi Code (Polish Histories)- Kenneth MacKsey, Without Enigma: The Ultra & Fellgiebel Riddles
- Tessa Stirling, Dria Nalecz and Tadeusz Dubicki, "Vol. I: the Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee" Intelligence Co-operation between Poland and Great Britain during World War II, London, Vallentine Mitchell, 2005. ISBN 0-85303-656-X.
- Stephen E. Ambrose, Eisenhower and the Intelligence Community in World War II, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 16, No. 1, The Second World War: Part 1 (Jan., 1981) , pp. 153-166
- J. V. Boone, A Brief History of Cryptology, 2005, ISBN 1591140846
- James Gannon, Stealing Secrets, Telling Lies: How Spies & Codebreakers Helped Shape the Twentieth Century, 2001, ISBN 1574883674.
- Kenneth Macksey, The Searchers: How Radio Interception Changed the Course of Both World Wars, 2004, ISBN 030436651X.
- Irene Young, Enigma Variations: Love, War and Bletchley Park, 2000, ISBN 1840183772
- Mark Urban, The Man Who Broke Napoleon's Codes, 2002, ISBN 0060934557.
- R.A. Ratcliff, Delusions of Intelligence: Enigma, Ultra, and the End of Secure Ciphers, Hardcover, 280 pages (May 31, 2006), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521855225[3].