Nice story man, been watching Bond movies since I was a kid.
In
From Russia With Love, Bond is to acquire a Russian cryptographic machine, like the
Enigma German WW II cryptographic tool, which led to a huge operation giving us one of the first computers, trying to decode the German
Enigma transmissions. That's a great story itself, watch
The Imitation Game for more info:
The Imitation Game (2014) - IMDb Bletchley Park in the U.K. is where that first computer was built & operated, made-of thousands of electromagnetic relays, big as a room, and every time it was switched-on, some of them would fail. But it eventually allowed us to read secret German war cables and wireless transmissions, and it helped us to plan for D-Day and what happened in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The machine in
From Russia With Love is more the size of a portable typewriter, and Bond has to meet the beautiful Russian female agent to secure the code machine, and transport it from Istanbul to the U.K. Robert Shaw plays another faux British agent, he's a Russian operative whose orders are to re-acquire the code machine and to kill 007.
Interestingly, after beginning the 007 series, Ian Fleming ordered a gold-plated Royal typewriter, and used that to write his works. He bought it with the profits from his early James Bond writings. Interestingly, Ian Fleming had contact with people at Bletchley Park, as he was a WW II operative in British Intelligence, as was his older brother, Robert Peter Fleming, who is presumed by some to be the source of inspiration for 007. RPF was also a British Intelligence operative during WW II.
This is the Royal typewriter model Ian Fleming used.