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Footnote Site Lets You Search and Modify WWII Records

Footnote Lets You Search, Modify WWII Records
Footnote, a site that specializes in digitizing historical documents, has partnered with the National Archives to provide access to boatloads of World War II-related documents. Footnote has scanned documents, including enlistment records, patrol reports, photos, and missing crew reports, and is providing text based searching of the archives.

The National Archives records are often incomplete, and Footnote is using this new partnership as a way to lure in new members. The site allows you to edit or add information to the pages of WWII veterans and comment on other historical documents.

The search works fairly well, but there is no way to browse scanned documents found during a search. Links are provided to the location of your search term in the documents, but there is no clear way to access other pages.

Being able to track down information about grandparents, uncles, and old family friends is great, and being able to flesh out their life story for the world to see is oddly satisfying. Disappointingly, though, Footnote is only providing free access to these documents on a temporary basis. [From: ArsTechnica]

Computers

WWII Computer vs. Modern Tech in Decrypting Challenge

WWII Colossus Faces Modern Tech in Decrypting Challenge1If Switched was around in the 1940's, and if we all had access to highly classified information, we would have been raving about Colossus as the hottest piece of tech in the world. Created in 1943, the vintage computer was about the size of a school bus and relied on wheels and paper tapes for input rather than multi-touch screens and voice recognition. So today it's a bit obsolete, a fact that was sadly proven as it suffered a crushing defeat when faced off against a modern decryption computer.

Colossus was used extensively during World War II by Allied forces to intercept and decrypt German commands and status updates, giving them the information they needed to win the war. It was destroyed at the end of the war to keep its secrets, well, secret. But, in 1994 a U.K. team started a project to rebuild the thing -- a daunting prospect considering they had nothing but photos to go on. Thankfully, the design of the thing left much of its innards open and visible, and the team was able to get Colossus working.

The challenge began yesterday with three encoded messages broadcast by radio from Paderborn, Germany, in an interesting throw-back to the days of WWII. Anyone was free to listen in and try to decrypt the message, and within a few hours a Bonn-based amateur radio operator announced he had decrypted one of the messages using modern decryption software. Meanwhile, unfortunately, the Colossus team was struggling just to get good radio reception so they could start the decryption process. In fact, the machine is still spinning away trying to decipher the messages, and should finish sometime today.

It's no surprise that the pinnacle of 1940's computer technology doesn't stack up to modern stuff. But, you have to admit that Colossus in its exposed form looks a lot more impressive than your typical disposable gadget, even if its functionality is a bit more limited.

From BBC News

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