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The BBC's Peter Hunt considers the significance of news that Prince William and Prince Harry are to get a joint household.
One of the most popular Christmas carols has a secret political code linked to the Jacobite rebellion, it is claimed.
The BBC finds evidence of militant groups in Gaza training young women to become suicide bombers in preparation for a collapse of the ceasefire.
A look at the making of a behind-the-scenes documentary of comedian Paddy Kielty taking on the challenging one-man play 'A Night in November'.
The workings of the giant World War II code-breaking computer Colossus are revealed.
Plans to renovate a former World War II German submarine and turn into a tourist attraction receive a cash boost.
Primaries in Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia hold unusual sway in a tight Democratic race, says the BBC's Jamie Coomarasamy.
An amateur cryptographer who beat the World War II machine in a code-cracking challenge is honoured.
An amateur has beaten Colossus in a code-cracking challenge that marks the end of a project to rebuild the machine.
Code-cracking is once again being carried out at Bletchley to mark the end of the Colossus re-build project.
A looking at the future computing technologies which will go beyond Moore's Law.
A German World War II submarine is to resurface at a Wirral ferry terminal as a tourist attraction.
Regular columnist Bill Thompson on the need for more information on internet access problems.
Two leading academics die in a car crash on the M11 as they travel from Cambridge to London.
Excerpts of remarks made by Andrei Lugovoi at a news conference in Moscow, in which he accuses the British of making him a scapegoat for the murder of Alexander Litvinenko.
The headscarf Faye Turney was made to wear in Iran made us look at her as a mother, not a seaman, says Lisa Jardine as she returns to A Point of View
Author Charlie Higson announces the title of his latest Young Bond book as Double or Die.
Catch up with the technology developments of the last year and vote for your favourite story.
Tony Blair's law and order measures seem to be about winning votes not cutting crime, a crime expert says.
Here is the text of the Oxford University's Professor Ian Loader's contribution to the Downing St crime debate.
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