Hacker Read top | best | new | newcomments | leaders | about | bookmarklet login
A transcriber on the Isle of Man can decipher almost anything (www.atlasobscura.com) similar stories update story
85.0 points by IntronExon | karma 3403 | avg karma 2.56 2018-02-11 17:09:04+00:00 | hide | past | favorite | 10 comments



view as:

Thought they were talking about Microsoft Word.

Me too, was about to start pontificating about text files, and markdown.

The article makes it sound like Ms Watson has a totally unique and unusual skill but there is actually a whole field of study around interpreting old handwritten texts (Paleography).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaeography


Indeed, a friend of mine worked at a small college during the school year, but every summer, she had a grant to sit in a library and transcribe old European texts from microfilms. The project was just to take a huge pile of texts and get the first several lines of each one into a searchable database. Full transcription was a hoped-for future goal.

At some point will the machines interpret all of them and tell us which are worth reading?

I bet my grandmother's letters would stump her!

My old essay folder?

Anyone who'd like to try their hand (eye?) at very similar work, but in a supportive, fail-safe setting, Zooniverse has several transcription projects:

* Letters by Dutch and Flemish artists from the 1500s [1]

* Hebrew and Arabic scripts from the 10th Century [2]

* Letters from Shakespeare's contemporaries [3]

* Hand-written notes by modern artists from the Tate ("Anno-Tate") [4]

* Letters between anti-slavery advocates of the 19C [5]

[1] https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/vincent-/parochial-archi...

[2] https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/judaicadh/scribes-of-the...

[3] https://www.shakespearesworld.org/#!/about

[4] https://anno.tate.org.uk/#!/about

[5]https://www.antislaverymanuscripts.org/


Big Clive?

Legal | privacy