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subs was: transputers again was: The dissolution of Commodoretransputers again was: The dissolution of Commodore 2939 Here, college is pretty low-cost; IF you can make the academic qualification. The open studies in Theology and Law are considered... Oh yeah. I've held one in my hands. It had the lead covers for sinking and the water soluble ink. I also found various pre-enciphering comm sheets including one for clear text transmission to U-boots to cease hostilities. Some may be blood covered. I was looking for, and found, real Ultra for Enigma tests. Cool stuff. The amazing thing were all the bored radio operators sending sport scores to each other. This before traffic analysis was known. Found several memos by Turing (how Enigmas work, that will be online if they can ever manage to clean that up on the *.ch site as well as a memo of how many and which serial numbers he had in his possession).
Rotor capture was less important than most realize. I think about half a dozen sub were captured intact. They was noted at the end of U-571 (ironic, the hull number of the Nautilus). But also German Naval HQ has all these sheets. That was Dornitz's "Milch cow" tanker boot? transputers again was: The dissolution of Commodore 2940 You are buttuming that indexing was always a given. It was not. Also, string manipulations were horrid to do because it had to be done... Yes, Barb, I am done with my stanford meetings and I am writing up a trip report on touring the Nevada Test Site. --
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transputers again was: The dissolution of Commodore 2939 Alt Folklore Computers from Newsgroups The #1 Usenet Provider on the Internet
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