Phil Hayes
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 60 |
Born | England |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Maria Louisa Figura |
Date of birth | July 5,1964 |
Zodiac sign | Cancer |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 693881 |
Curious George
The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat
Boohbah
Conan and the Young Warriors
Unforgiven
The Wacky World of Tex Avery
Aaagh! It's the Mr. Hell Show
Miracle
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days
Sabrina: The Animated Series
Falling from the Sky: Flight 174
The Adventures of T-Rex
Powder
Look Who's Talking Now
Buddy Thunderstruck
Holiday Heart
Zatch Bell!
Maya the Bee
Leo the Lion: King of the Jungle
Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer
Double Cross
Deadly Deposits
Monster Mash
The Brothers Grunt
Mystery of Crop Circles
The Hunchback Of Notre Dame
Angry Monk: Reflections on Tibet
Pocahontas
Zimmer 606
Boohbah: Snowman
Wolves
Boohbah: Hot Dog
Boohbah: Umbrella
Life
Zoids: Fuzors (US)
The Dreamlike Path
Snow White
Stone Protectors
Alice in Wonderland
Buddy Thunderstruck: The Maybe Pile
Sleeping Beauty
Itsy Bitsy Spider
ReBoot: Daemon Rising
ReBoot: My Two Bobs
Killer
Decoy
Courage
The Wacky World of Tex Avery: Power Pooch to the Rescue!
Jungle Book
The Wacky World of Tex Avery: Tex Rides Again
Heidi
Phil Hayes Life story
Phil Hayes is a voice actor known for voicing Scratch, General Hawk, and Harland. Take a visual walk through their career and see 122 images of the characters they've voiced and listen to 17 clips that showcase their performances.
Heath Robinson: WW2 codebreaking machine reconstructed
Due to secrecy surrounding The Work of codebreaking at Bletchley Park, illustrator W Heath Robinson never knew The Machine was named after him
A World War Two codebreaking machine has been reconstructed after a seven-year project so it can run in public for the First Time .
The Heath Robinson has been restored at The National Museum of Computing in Milton Keynes by a team of six.
The Machine was an early attempt to automate code-cracking and, due to its complexity, was named after the illustrator W Heath Robinson.
Phil Hayes , of The Museum , said The Work was "quite an achievement".
He said it was completed using a hand-drawn circuit diagram along with replica circuits based on 1940s technology.
"It was quite an achievement because all we had was a few photographs and a hand-drawn diagram," said Mr Hayes, The Chief engineer on The Project .
"It was a challenge to get The Machine to work. "
Mr Hayes worked on The Project alongside a team of five Volunteers .
Bletchley Park was the wartime home of the Government Code & Cypher School which broke the German Enigma and Lorenz codesThe Machine , which went into operation at Bletchley Park in June 1943, is acknowledged as the inspiration for Colossus, The World 's first programmable computer.
Peter Higginson, a great nephew of W Heath Robinson, was due to attend a ceremony on Saturday to unveil The Machine , which is on display at The Museum .
The Colossus , was designed off the back of work to try to improve the Heath Robinson.
Volunteer John Pether was among The Team of six who worked on The MachineEven after The Launch of Colossus in 1944, the Heath Robinson continued to develop and was used in tackling messages sent between Hitler and the German High Command .
At the end of World War Two there were two "super Robinsons" in use and another two under development. The Machine was operational until the 1950S .
milton keynes, world war two, bletchley, malvern
Source of news: bbc.com