One of the last surviving WWII Nazi code breakers tells her story of the greatest intelligence coup of the war and Hollywood's portrayal of cryptanalyst Alan Turing, whose life is the subject of the movie; The Imitation Game.
She is awesome. I think Allen, was unintentionally brilliant not because he HAD to be but in spite of what he thought he could ever be but then became such. He lived up to his highest self and I am proud of him. He had true courage and despite what happened...he is a HERO in my mind.
It is said that the work of Alan Turing and his counterparts potentially saved 14 million lives and shortened the war by 2-4 years. He is quite literally one of the greatest heroes in human history. The sheer intelligence that it would take to just build the Turing machine and break Enigma is unreal to me... He did all this and his country turned their back on him. Such a tragedy and it really bothers me.
"I think they have done quite well" :D I wish i could hear from alan turing himself what he thinks about the movie. Does anyone knows any other record of him, like voice or something?
@@Martin_Z555 indeed, she says they would’ve done quite well if they’d taken the edge off. So suggesting it was overdone and therefore not like it actually was.
So, ay esh stands for Lemon. The idea is reaching to lemon. You eat lemon and it promises forever health. Can we consider it a Turkish Lokum? Sure! Is it a desert? Is it something you eat every day or once in a while. So it promises to adjust you PH and good digestion. Say you have a scurvy, what you need is lemons. Why lemons? Do we eat walnuts instead of lemons? No, we don't! Walnuts are nuts, and not a fruit. Lemon is head to toe, so it will filter all the wrong Ph that is in different parts of your body. It is also not a lime. Think of it more like Walnuts when it come to elegance!