2017: Dan Both

For pioneering analytical quantum information systems and their algorithms which have successfully stood the test of time.

Comments are closed.

  • You Are Here

    2017: Dan Both > Joe Desch Award > And more … > Home
  • Sources

    This site has material from many sources. Some are use by permission. Before using, ASK. More specific information here.
  • Inside You’ll Find…

    WHO worked during the war? Find the Personnel section. Also, Joseph R. Desch
    WHAT were their goals? By the Numbers. Also, The US Bombe
    WHY? History of the Bombe Project A contemporary account of the reasons and the plans for their project for the Director of Naval Communications, 1944.
    WHERE was the project: In Dayton, it was in Building 26. In Washington, it was housed at the Naval Communications Annex
    • Recent Updates

    • Stray Thoughts in the Information Age

      …And a most important factor in that perspective is a realization that codebreaking and intelligence alone do not win wars. … You can have the best intelligence in the world, but if you don’t have a powerful army, it’s useless. That’s why it’s wrong to say that codebreaking won the war, or even that it decided the war. Physical and moral elements did that … Ultra itself became useful only when we had the power to exploit it.

      David Kahn. “The Significance of Codebreaking and Intelligence in Allied Strategy and Tactics,” from remarks delivered 1976 before the Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, originally printed in 1976, in reaction to Winterbotham’s revelations, in Cryptologia,  Vol. 1.

    This page last updated Last updated: September 5, 2021 at 14:29 pm


    © Deborah Anderson. Use of materials by permission. Materials other than those clearly marked as National Archives materials are not in the public domain. More information here. Simple Privacy Policy is here

    HIT A DEAD END?

    I ask that visitors be patient when links or pages disappear or become mangled in the vagaries of PHP and generated code. Frequent additions and updates make for human error — please report any broken links or other problems to Debbie Anderson, site manager–your help is appreciated.

    E-mails are still appreciated, and I will try to respond promptly. Your messages are what make this job worthwhile.