In a stunning display of modern technology, Konrad Zuse presented
his Z3 machine to the Deutsche
Versuchsanstalt für Luftfahrt (German Laboratory for Aviation). An electromechanical
computer, the Z3 was built to analyze wing flutter, calculating vast
collections of data that would further improve plane designs. With some two
thousand relays, the Z3 processed up to twenty-two bits data at five to ten
Hertz. It even offered external tape memory, meaning a new program could be
created without any mechanical remodeling to the machine.
A member of the Oberkommando
der Luftwaffe, the air force high command,sat in on the presentation and
raised a question, “Can we use it for our codes?”
As the war continued to escalate, encoding and code-breaking
had become some of the most important matters to ensure victory. The
Kriegsmarine B-Dienst had made
notable success breaking British naval codes and even those of the neutral
Americans, giving predatory U-boat attacks an effective edge as they knew where
all British ships were at sea. For defense, German forces used the daunting
enigma machine to create codes, which was considered the utmost in encryption
technology. The rotors inside the machine created a tri-fold system of
encryption that could be reproduced in seconds by another Engima machine while
being virtually indecipherable to enemy code-breakers. The Battle of Britain
had showed to some air officers, however, that the codes might not be as
unbreakable as they were told.
In fact, the British program Ultra had long cracked the
Enigma code. Polish cryptologists at the Biuro
Szyfrow had been reading German codes since 1932, and the new
implementation of an updated code ten times more complicated in 1939 prompted
them to reach out to French and British offices. Just over a month before the
war began, Poles delivered handmade duplicates of the Enigma machines and, most
importantly, their methods for cracking to Bletchley Park.
With the Luftwaffe funding Zuse’s machines, he was able to
build a staff and catch the attention of the Wehrmacht, who immediately began
placing miniature Z-machines with the armies. Ultra found itself bewildered by
the intensely complex codes, which translated to defeats on the front. In North
Africa in September of 1942, the Battle of El Alamein was called Britain’s “Second
Dunkirk” when Rommel’s armies, despite being nearly exhausted of fuel, drove
the Eighth Army into the Mediterranean Sea. The resulting loss of Egypt and
devastating Battle of the Suez Canal are touted as two of the biggest disasters
of World War II.
Code-computing became a shadow arms-race in the midst of the
war. Technologists hurried to outpace one another in faster processing speeds
and adaptability of memory. Germans continued to apply the technology to
weapons such as guidance on their V-2 rockets and the bomber-hunting V-3 that
knocked enemy planes from the air. Americans brought computers to their Los
Alamos laboratories for better calculations of atomic blasts, while the British
improved integrated sonar detection.
The War in Europe came to an end in 1947 with the Soviet
seizure of Berlin. With British and American armies long bogged down in Africa
and the first invasion of Sicily aborted, the western Allies contributed
primarily air support while struggling to gain a foothold in what Churchill
described as Europe’s “soft underbelly.” The Soviets, meanwhile, forced their
way through heavy German defense, including the Battle of the Bulge, which spanned
nearly all of occupied Poland. German resources finally gave out, bringing an
end to the war that many feared would be atomic, as was seen in Japan.
After the war, another burst of development came as the West
attempted to catch up with the work of Soviet scientists and those captured
from Germany. Miniaturization of technology brought integrated circuits, which
in the West was spun off to consumer markets. Computers were applied to
banking, weather-mapping, nutrition and medicine, communications, and more.
Wired and cellular integration gave handheld devices the ability to converse on
a myriad of levels by the mid-1980s, including in virtual reality through
headset broadcasting devices. By the turn of the millennium, just about
everyone on the planet carried their personal computers, creating a digital
universe that seemed to envelop more thought than the prospect of ever sending
a human to the moon.
--
In reality, the Z3 was only applied to engineering matters. Improvements
to the Z3 like fully electronic switches were denied as “not war important.”
After the war, Zuse completed his Z4, which served as the first commercial
computer in Europe, being sold to the Swiss. Zuse continued to develop leaps in
computing, like the magnetic-storage memory for the Z22 in 1955. German forces
instituted the Lorenz cipher in 1941, which was easily cracked by Ultra’s
Colossus computers.
Interesting post. A more minimal tweak to history which would still have had major implications was if the Luftwaffe officer had the idea "if the Allies have anything like this then the Enigma isn't as secure as we think." If the Germans seriously worried that Enigma was cracked, they could have done low-tech tweaks such as adding a layer of super-encipherment to Enigma which would have largely thwarted the crib-based British attacks. It wouldn't be necessary to imagine practical mini Z-machines, which would have been beyond the capabilities of 1940s technology.
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