rose-fish - définition. Qu'est-ce que rose-fish
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est rose-fish - définition

ALLIED CODENAME FOR ANY OF SEVERAL GERMAN TELEPRINTER STREAM CIPHERS USED DURING WORLD WAR II
Fish cyphers; Fish ciphers; Fish (cipher); Fish (cypher); FISH (cryptography)
  • The Lorenz SZ42 machine with its covers removed. [[Bletchley Park]] museum
  • url = https://archive.org/details/ultraamericansth00parr}}</ref>

rose-fish      
n.
Norway haddock.
Fish (cryptography)         
Fish (sometimes FISH) was the UK's GC&CS Bletchley Park codename for any of several German teleprinter stream ciphers used during World War II. Enciphered teleprinter traffic was used between German High Command and Army Group commanders in the field, so its intelligence value (Ultra) was of the highest strategic value to the Allies.
salmon ladder         
  • Pool-and-weir fish ladder at [[Bonneville Dam]] on the [[Columbia River]]
  • Denil Fishway on Salmon Creek, [[Montana]]
  • FERC]] Fish Ladder Safety Sign
  • Drone video of a fish way in Estonia, on the river Jägala
STRUCTURE THAT ALLOWS FISH AND OTHER ORGANISMS TO PASS ARTIFICIAL OR NATURAL BARRIERS AT WATERCOURSES
Eel ladder; Fish ladders; Fishway; Fish pass; Fish lift; Salmon ladder; Fish passage; Fish stairs; Fish Ladder; Borland Lift; Dam fish ladder; Barrage fish ladder; Weir fish ladder; Fish cannon; Salmon cannon; Fish passages
(also salmon leap)
¦ noun a series of natural steps in a cascade or steeply sloping river bed, or a similar arrangement incorporated into a dam, allowing salmon to pass upstream.

Wikipédia

Fish (cryptography)

Fish (sometimes FISH) was the UK's GC&CS Bletchley Park codename for any of several German teleprinter stream ciphers used during World War II. Enciphered teleprinter traffic was used between German High Command and Army Group commanders in the field, so its intelligence value (Ultra) was of the highest strategic value to the Allies. This traffic normally passed over landlines, but as German forces extended their geographic reach beyond western Europe, they had to resort to wireless transmission.

Bletchley Park decrypts of messages enciphered with the Enigma machines revealed that the Germans called one of their wireless teleprinter transmission systems "Sägefisch" (sawfish) which led British cryptographers to refer to encrypted German radiotelegraphic traffic as Fish. The code Tunny (tunafish) was the name given to the first non-Morse link, and it was subsequently used for the Lorenz SZ machines and the traffic enciphered by them.