Rocket engines were known before WWII (a thousand years ago in China, and efforts like Goddard in the early 20th C), but you can't disregard the Nazi Germany invention of the V2 just because of that; it was a big deal, not just a fleshing out of prototypes.
Later stealth, and nuclear carriers, and ICBMs, were a result of the cold war. I don't see how it matters whether the war is hot or cold.
I'll grant you Turing (aside from crypto), not that anyone is claiming differently.
The Internet directly arose from the Arpanet, which was purely a DARPA (Department of Defense) project, and there are lots of other well known examples.
Short wave radar, as used on planes ever since, was developed as part of the war effort by the MIT Radiation Lab.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiation_Laboratory
Rocket engines were known before WWII (a thousand years ago in China, and efforts like Goddard in the early 20th C), but you can't disregard the Nazi Germany invention of the V2 just because of that; it was a big deal, not just a fleshing out of prototypes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocket#World_War_II
"Development of stealth technology likely began in Germany during World War II"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stealth_aircraft
Later stealth, and nuclear carriers, and ICBMs, were a result of the cold war. I don't see how it matters whether the war is hot or cold.
I'll grant you Turing (aside from crypto), not that anyone is claiming differently.
The Internet directly arose from the Arpanet, which was purely a DARPA (Department of Defense) project, and there are lots of other well known examples.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arpanet
> stuff that was nearly useless.
Citation needed.
> But what on the original innovation side can you actually attribute?
Short wavelength radar is inarguable, regardless of whether cold wars count.