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Regarding the (possible) reference to the Imitation Game, whilst it may be true that the Americans Russians French and Germans thought Enigma unbreakable, the Polish had been breaking it for years before Turing got involved and work done in Poland was an important part of the British success early in the war.  German improvements to operating practices later stopped the Polish methods working and yes Turing had better methods that still worked, later on in the war.  But Poland at least, didn't think it was unbreakable.  Just saying.
 
Regarding the (possible) reference to the Imitation Game, whilst it may be true that the Americans Russians French and Germans thought Enigma unbreakable, the Polish had been breaking it for years before Turing got involved and work done in Poland was an important part of the British success early in the war.  German improvements to operating practices later stopped the Polish methods working and yes Turing had better methods that still worked, later on in the war.  But Poland at least, didn't think it was unbreakable.  Just saying.
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:While we are "just saying". The Germans were well aware that the Enigma was breakable, they just figured it would be too much effort. It really was, the total resources pored into breaking the Enigma was on par with the Manhattan project and the moon landing (ie US space program during the 1960s). The Germans did some changes to increase security during the war, but had they suspected how completely Enigma was broken they would probably have abandoned it. [[Special:Contributions/172.68.182.202|172.68.182.202]] 17:50, 4 May 2017 (UTC)
 
  
 
I think the whole paragraph about informatics at the bottom is missing the point.  That explanation is based on the premise that Cueball was told the problem was a "hard problem" (a formal type of problem) and didn't understand.  Megan never used the formal term "hard" in describing the problem.  She merely said that her field had struggling for years.[[Special:Contributions/162.158.79.5|162.158.79.5]] 13:13, 2 May 2017 (UTC)
 
I think the whole paragraph about informatics at the bottom is missing the point.  That explanation is based on the premise that Cueball was told the problem was a "hard problem" (a formal type of problem) and didn't understand.  Megan never used the formal term "hard" in describing the problem.  She merely said that her field had struggling for years.[[Special:Contributions/162.158.79.5|162.158.79.5]] 13:13, 2 May 2017 (UTC)

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