UK wartime codebreaking centre becomes cyber education college


  • TECH
  • Thursday, 24 Nov 2016

Chairman and founder of Bletchley Park Capital Partners Ltd Tim Reynolds looks around G-block where the National College of Cyber Education will be based at Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes, Britain, September 15, 2016. Picture taken September 15, 2016. REUTERS/Darren Staples

BLETCHLEY, England: It was once the home of Britain's codebreakers during World War Two. Now more than 70 years later, Bletchley Park is preparing to host the UK's first national college of cyber education, with a first intake of students starting in September 2018. 

Work is under way to revamp several derelict buildings on the site where mathematician Alan Turing cracked Nazi Germany's "unbreakable" Enigma code. 

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