The Victorian manor house at Bletchley Park fell into disrepair after World War II
The home of Britain's World War II code-breakers will offer internet safety advice to children when it re-opens next year.
The Bletchley Park Trust is restoring the site near Milton Keynes and expects to get 250,000 visitors a year.
Software firm McAfee will be a partner in providing an IT learning zone and cyber security exhibition.
The trust said it hoped the attractions would inspire the 16,000 children it expected to attend each year.
Bletchley Park was the highly-secretive site where teams, including the "father of computing" Alan Turing, broke the German Enigma codes.
The trust is aiming to re-open the site in time for the 70th anniversary of the World War II D-Day invasion of France, next June.
'Real difference'
The learning zone and security exhibition will be built in a derelict block on the estate.
Ian Standen, trust chief executive, said: "The work undertaken at Bletchley made a real difference and helped to change the course of history.
"We hope to inspire the next generation of potential code-breakers and cyber security experts to keep us safe in the digital world."
Gert-Jan Schenk, European president at McAfee, said: "Working with Bletchley Park allows us to make a real impact on the cyber security education of children, not to mention the chance to help commemorate the part Bletchley Park played in the birth of the information age."
Đăng ký: Tieng Anh Vui


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Tieng Anh Vui
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