In 1963, Hasenjaeger built a
Universal Turing machine out of old telephone relays. Although Hasenjaeger's work on UTMs was largely unknown and he never published any details of the machinery during his lifetime, his family decided to donate the machine to the
Heinz Nixdorf Museum in
Paderborn,
Germany, after his death. In an academic paper presented at the
International Conference of History and Philosophy of Computing in 2012. Rainer Glaschick, Turlough Neary, Damien Woods, Niall Murphy had examined Hasenjaeger's UTM machine at the request of Hasenjaeger family and found that the UTM was remarkably small and efficiently
universal. Hasenjaeger UTM contained 3-tapes, 4 states, 2 symbols and was an evolution of ideas from
Edward F. Moore's first universal machine and
Hao Wang's
B-machine. Hasenjaeger went on to build a small efficient Wang B-machine simulator. This was again proven by the team assembled by Rainer Glaschick to be efficiently
universal.
Comments on the Enigma Machine weakness It was only in the 1970s that Hasenjaeger learned that the Enigma Machine had been so comprehensively broken. It impressed him that Alan Turing himself, considered one of the greatest mathematicians of the 20th century, had worked on breaking the device. The fact that the Germans had so comprehensively underestimated the weaknesses of the device, in contrast to Turing and Welchman's work, was seen by Hasenjaeger today as entirely positive. Hasenjaeger stated: ==Bibliography==