back to article Oldest unreadable alphabet yields to 'tablet' computer

A new apparatus called the Reflectance Transformation Imaging (RTI) System for Ancient Documentary Artefacts developed by the University of Southampton has brought Oxford boffins closer to deciphering the world's oldest unreadable alphabet. Described in this paper (PDF), the RTI machine comprises an off-the-shelf Nikon D3X …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    That's a pretty neat idea, but it makes me wonder why they haven't done laser scanning. Presumably it's either too expensive or not high-enough resolution, but I'm not sure what kind of resolution laser scanners can get now, or what size features they're after (presumably 'pretty small').

    I actually used a wildly-simplified kind of technique like this when trying to (crudely) look for a broken trace on a PCB; a few different angles swapped back and forth in Photoshop make it much easier to piece together details than a single image, even if that image -is- high quality. The transitions make things jump.

    I have access to some LEDs here. If anyone wants to send me a D3X I'll be happy to experiment and report on my findings...

    1. Full Mental Jacket

      This technique reveals details that are not "seen" with a single light source.

      See here for a image showing results of the technique - http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/ptm/

      There was a programme on the BBC recently, showing that they have scanned the Anitkythera Mechanism in the same way and revealed previously unnoticed detail.

      1. Dave 126 Silver badge

        @ Full Mental Jacket

        Cheers, nice link!

      2. Uffish
        Thumb Up

        Can someone do the Moon please.

        Very interesting article and it even gives links to download the program. Might be possible for at least the central part of the moon. I'm going to try it myself but my practical abilities are minimal.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Can someone do the Moon please.

          Well, the camera shouldn't be a problem, but the array of lights surrounding it on all sides might be somewhat of a challenge...

          1. Martin Budden Silver badge
            Trollface

            Re: Can someone do the Moon please.

            Partial array of lights around the moon should be easy: use a single source of light and move it (or move the moon), taking photos with the light in different positions (or the moon in different orientations). If you like, you could then stitch your photos together to make a time lapse video. Why not google "moon time lapse" to find out if anyone has already tried doing this using an existing light source.

    2. Dave 126 Silver badge

      Laser scanning....

      ... well, several years ago archaeologists pioneered the technique of scanning ancient tablets with a laser, and then rendering the resulting virtual model as if it were made of chrome. This minimised distracting surface coloration, and made every little detail stand out by moving the virtual light source.

      Though not mentioned explicitly in this article, my assumption is that the camera remains still whilst a sequence of shots is taken, the tablet illuminated in turn by each of the LEDs. Again, this serves to highlight every scratch, much as we might examine a physical object for scratches by rotating it in our hands near a bright light.

  2. jake Silver badge
    Pint

    More to the point ...

    ... can the research be used to teach commentards to proofread before posting their typ(e)os? To say nothing of the ElReg authors, towhit:

    "Reg readers who paid attention in Classics classes will Cuneiform was a system of writing used in ancient Sumeria"

    Beer, because proofreading large quantities of text requires it ;-)

    1. Marvin the Martian
      Unhappy

      Re: More to the point ...

      If you're gonna correct the article, you might as well correct the title: "yields" should be replaced by "may yield" -- no breakthrough yet, just a setup with better images.

      You're still dealing with a rather mysterious, short-lived society; there's about 3000 of those incomprehensible tablets lying around with no multi-linguage ones (think Rosetta Stone), so scanning a few at the Louvre is a great step but just a next step -- not a guaranteed solution.

      This is one of the rare occasions of a sci/tech story where the BBC News writeup was clearly superior.

    2. Zaphod.Beeblebrox
      Headmaster

      Re: More to the point ...

      Ahem. I think you meant "to wit".

      YW

      1. Tom 13

        Re: I think you meant...

        I think you added an extra 'o' and ' ', although to be honest, I've never been able to fat finger that combination myself.

  3. frank ly

    Translation

    Top image: Learned scholars devise means of reading ancient Ubaid tablets by light from 76 candles placed in different positions.

    Bottom image: Bag of flour, packet of nuts, small jar of milk.

    1. Richard J
      Coat

      Re: Translation

      I'm pretty certain that your translation is wrong.

      From my knowledge of proto-Elamite*, the top image translates as "You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike".

      The bottom image translates as "You have been eaten by a grue"

      *Mine's the one with the "proto-Elamite for beginners" tablet in the pocket.

    2. Robert E A Harvey

      Re: TBottom image

      "May contain nuts"

      1. Michael H.F. Wilkinson Silver badge

        Re: TBottom image

        Undoubtedly this was attached to a packet of peanuts

    3. Flocke Kroes Silver badge

      Re: Translation

      It says:

      I for one salute our Achaemenid Persian overlords. I'll get my coat.

    4. NukEvil
      Paris Hilton

      Re: Translation

      I bet it's porn. If not, rule 34 will soon apply anyways.

      1. Dr. Mouse

        Re: Translation

        "Dear lord. It IS obvious."

        http://xkcd.com/593/

        1. Graham Marsden
          Coat

          Re: Translation

          The bottom one is the EULA.

  4. Hud Dunlap
    Trollface

    This is nothing new

    Ok, the LED's rather than flashbulbs are new. HP developed this technique years ago and it was used to study the Antikythera mechanism found off of Greece.

  5. Neil Barnes Silver badge

    I don't think the idea of multiple images is new...

    but the ability to mix those images to give moveable shaded views (presumably in real time) probably is. Indeed, pick the right two groups of images and you have a stereoscopic pair - a victorian idea, but let's not cavil. I'd assume that a stereoscopic image of very high resolution which can be moved is as good as - or, given the available detail, better than - having the tablet in your hand.

    And it's harder to drop it and break it.

    With regard to decoding - one of the things that drops out of OCR work is that it's much more reliable to guess at an unknown character when you are sure of those characters adjacent to it (that is, if you have a character which might be a 'b' or an 'h', knowing it is preceded by 't' and followed by 'e' makes that guess a lot better). I can't say - not understanding cuneiform - but I'd expect even a language written on clay to work in similar ways. Though if it is 'one symbol per word' then context from adjacent words is also required, of course.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: I don't think the idea of multiple images is new...

      "Indeed, pick the right two groups of images and you have a stereoscopic pair"

      Not in this case; the camera doesn't move. Looking at a different image with each eye would be wacky, but it wouldn't be 'stereo' in the sense that your eyes resolve 3D images.

  6. bitten
    Windows

    And nearly 30 years ago I did 3D imaging with a single image and structured light. It would have worked with most of those tablets.

    1. This post has been deleted by its author

  7. James Gosling
    Holmes

    Surely

    Surely it must be the earliest recorded Apple patent!

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Surely

      Notice that top tablet has a rounded corner, not so funny now is it.

      The second tablet is mainly based around "order black cloth, invent roll neck..."

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Facepalm

        Re: Surely

        Down-voted for mentioning "rounded corners" in an indescribeably tedious attempt to be witty, that stopped being even remotely amusing after about the thousandth time someone did it... which even then was probably a couple of thousand identical postings before your own sparkling effort.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Joke

          Re: Surely

          The little facepalm dude next to your post has rounded corners. Prepare for the lawsuit.

  8. mIRCat
    Pint

    Etcetera...

    Amazing! Fantastic! Astounding!

  9. AJB

    Developed by Southampton university

    So it was developed by Southampton Uni, who passed it over for Oxford to switch it on and use it, with the same analytical skills they clearly have. I think that Southampton seem to have missed out a little here, happily handing over their idea and device.

    1. Robert Forsyth

      Re: Developed by Southampton university

      I expect because of their name, Oxford can get a loan of the tablets. Although it might be safer for the tablets, to send the camera and LEDs to the tablets.

  10. David Pollard

    CT Scans?

    Can this technique or something like it be applied in 3D to medical imaging?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Coat

      Re: CT Scans?

      Or breasts?

      1. Dave 126 Silver badge

        Re: CT Scans?

        Nope. Its for opaque materials, as it works by exaggerating shadows.

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Clay, however, degrades over time

    Damn. I might as well give up drafting that patent for my new hard disc technology, then.

  12. xyz Silver badge

    I translated that tablet with my eyes

    It reads.... Gr8 m8 c u lol

  13. RyokuMas
    Joke

    It says...

    "Hello, Sweetie"

  14. Johnny Canuck

    50 shades of clay.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Well played. May your death be relatively swift and painless.

  15. Robert E A Harvey

    grone

  16. P. Lee
    Coat

    It says:

    I can't read your handwriting. 0/10

    Must try harder.

  17. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    All that effort...

    I bet it turns out to be an elaborate pigeon breeding manual.

  18. Peter Simpson 1
    IT Angle

    Only a matter of time...

    ..before I can download my new proto-Elamite.TTF font file, then.

  19. A 20
    WTF?

    Soft/blurred image

    I can't help but wonder how much better it would be if the camera were in focus, or failing that, not attached to the neck of a rubber chicken. Whatever the problem, that sample image is >seriously< not sharp.

    Repeat after me - tripod, remote release, mirror lockup.

    The only other option I can think of is that they shot at something like f/256 to get it all in focus, and lost all their detail to diffraction as a result. In which case, it's time to google "z-stacking".

  20. PeterM42
    Happy

    Can it be used.......

    ......to decipher doctor's handwriting?

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