One of the world’s oldest biblical texts read for the first time

When the En-Gedi scrolls were excavated from an ancient synagogue’s Holy Ark in the 1970s, it was a bittersweet discovery for archaeologists. Though the texts provided further evidence for an ancient Jewish community in this oasis near the Dead Sea, the scrolls had been reduced to charred lumps by fire. Even the act of moving them to a research facility caused more damage. But decades later, archaeologists have read parts of one scroll for the first time. A team of scientists in Israel and the US used a sophisticated medical scanning technique, coupled with algorithmic analysis, to "unwrap" a parchment that’s more than 1,700 years old.

(credit: Science Advances)

Found in roughly the same area as the Dead Sea Scrolls, the En-Gedi scrolls were used by a Jewish community in the region between the 8th century BCE and 6th century CE. In the year 600 CE, the community and its temple were destroyed by fire. Archaeologists disagree on the exact historical provenance of the En-Gedi scrolls—carbon dating suggests fourth century, but stratigraphic evidence points to a date closer to the second. Either way, these scrolls could provide a kind of missing link between the biblical texts of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the traditional biblical text of the Tanakh found in the Masoretic Text from roughly the 9th century. As the researchers put it in a paper published in Science Advances:

Dating the En-Gedi scroll to the third or fourth century CE falls near the end of the period of the biblical Dead Sea Scrolls (third century BCE to second century CE) and several centuries before the medieval biblical fragments found in the Cairo Genizah, which date from the ninth century CE onward. Hence, the En-Gedi scroll provides an important extension to the evidence of the Dead Sea Scrolls and offers a glimpse into the earliest stages of almost 800 years of near silence in the history of the biblical text.

How to read a burned scroll with computers

But it wasn’t until University of Kentucky computer scientist Brent Seales developed a technique he calls volume cartography that archaeologists actually got that "glimpse." Seales had previously worked on a project to read fire-damaged scrolls from the library of a wealthy Roman whose home in Herculaneum was destroyed in the Pompeii eruption. He suggested that Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologist Pnina Shor scan the scrolls using X-ray micro-CT, which is essentially a very high-resolution CT scan of exactly the same type you might get in a hospital. Indeed, Shor explained in a press conference that her team used a medical imaging facility to produce digital scans that she sent to Seales to analyze in Kentucky.

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via Ars Technica
One of the world’s oldest biblical texts read for the first time

Stanford Professor puts his entire digital photography course online for free

Stanford Professor puts his entire digital photography course online for free

Marc Levoy is one of those names that belongs right near the top. His work has led to a lot of the technical advances that we see in use today with computer generated imagery. So, it’s no wonder that he jumped into digital photography. From 2009 until 2014, Levoy taught digital photography at Stanford.

In 2016, he revised the course and taught it again at Google in Spring. Now, the entire revised course is available online completely free. The course assumes no prior knowledge of photography whatsoever. It covers pretty much everything you’d ever want to know about photography. Covering a multitude of technical aspects from the basics to extremely in-depth.

There’s hours and hours of video covering Levoy’s lectures to Google over a 4 month period. Several web based apps are there, too, to help understand some of the trickier technical concepts of photography. He also provides several assignments to help you challenge yourself and put what you’ve learned to good use.

It’s a whole hell of a lot of stuff to read and watch. From what I’ve seen so far, it’s well worth watching it all.

You can find the entire course for free here. If you have any interest at all in the technical side of photography (you should), then what are you waiting for? Get stuck in!

via DIYPhotography.net – Photography and Studio Lighting – Do It Yourself
Stanford Professor puts his entire digital photography course online for free

GOP Gubernatorial Candidate’s Latest Ad Is Just Him Shooting a Machine Gun for 20 Seconds


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Good people of Missouri, former Navy SEAL (and former Democrat) Eric Greitens would like to be your next Governor. Now please watch him fire off a Gatling machine gun for 20 seconds.

Greitens won the Missouri primary just days ago, positioning himself as an “outsider” who will “take aim at politics as usual.”

Greitens isn’t a single issue candidate by any means, though. He also released an ad where he shoots this gun:

In addition to Missouri voters, Greitens has also garnered the attention of conservative billionaire Sheldon Adelson, who donated $200,000 to Greitens’ campaign.

So, Eric, how are you feeling on the heels of your big win?



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We bet.

[h/t @shadihamid]

via Gizmodo
GOP Gubernatorial Candidate’s Latest Ad Is Just Him Shooting a Machine Gun for 20 Seconds

Breaking: Columbus SWAT Capture Man Who Attempted Ambush Of Officers

Here we go again.

Shots were fired in Columbus, Ohio last night in another apparent attempt to ambush police officers.

A large section of Columbus, Ohio was under lockdown last night after police were shot at by a man with a rifle.  The police were responding to a call about shots fired near Columbus circle.  When they arrived at scene, they came under fire.  Police cordoned off a large section of town, including a long stretch of Cleveland Avenue.

Police assigned a SWAT team and a helicopter to aid in the search.  Later, a man in an SUV was identified as a suspect, which led to a standoff .  During the standoff, the suspect threw what turned out to be a hoax bomb.  His SUV was blocked in by police.

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Based upon reports for various media sources, the would-be cop-killer appears to have randomly fired shots into local businesses and vehicles to lure police into the area, and then engaged officers as they arrived on the scene. Fortunately for the responding officers, the suspect was unable to make any hits.

He then fled the scene, but was soon spotted and boxed in by three police armored cars and SWAT  officers behind a heavy wheeled shield.

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The suspect surrendered after a lengthy standoff and was taken into custody.

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We’ll update this story as we have more information.

The post Breaking: Columbus SWAT Capture Man Who Attempted Ambush Of Officers appeared first on Bearing Arms.

via Bearing Arms
Breaking: Columbus SWAT Capture Man Who Attempted Ambush Of Officers

Boaty McBoatface Won the Poll to Name a $300 Million Research Ship

Boaty McBoatface Won the Poll to Name a $300 Million Research Ship
Image Credit: NERC/PA

In case you needed more evidence that the internet, left unfettered, is awful: Boaty McBoatface has now won the poll to name an upcoming polar research vessel.

Last month, the Natural Environment Research Council opened a poll, asking internet strangers what they should name their new boat. Rather than going with a shortlist of options, they made it wide open—so predictably, the internet rallied behind Boaty McBoatface.

The option collected 124,109 votes, four more times than second-placed RRS Poppy-Mai. Honorable mention goes to RRS It’s bloody cold here, which rolled in fourth, with 10,679 votes. Before you get too excited, remember that the final naming decision does rest with the NERC.

It’s been a good year for the internet: first a bunch of hockey fans sent an enforcer to the NHL All-Star game (and won him a car); now a major scientific research project is getting a dumb (if endlessly hilarious) name suggestion.

What about the former BBC presenter who started the whole thing? Well, he’s doing an admirable job of not gloating.

[The Guardian]

via Gizmodo
Boaty McBoatface Won the Poll to Name a $300 Million Research Ship

Artificial Intelligence Sheds New Light on the Origins of the Bible

Artificial Intelligence Sheds New Light on the Origins of the Bible
Inked inscriptions from the fortress of Arad, located in southern Judah. Image: Michael Cordonsky / Tel Aviv University / Israel Antiquities Authority

Twenty six hundred years ago, a band of Judahite soldiers kept watch on their kingdom’s southern border in the final days before Jerusalem was sacked by Nebuchadnezzar. They left behind numerous inscriptions—and now, a groundbreaking digital analysis has revealed how many writers penned them. The research and innovative technology behind it stand to teach us about the origins of the Bible itself.

“It’s well understood that the Bible was not composed in real time but was probably written and edited later,” Arie Shaus, a mathematician at Tel Aviv University told Gizmodo. “The question is, when exactly?”

Shaus is one of several mathematicians and archaeologists trying to broach that question in a radical manner: by using machine learning tools to determine how many people were literate in ancient times. Their first major analysis, which appears today in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, suggests that the ability to read and write was widespread throughout the Kingdom of Judah, setting the stage for the compilation of Biblical texts.

Although parts of this conclusion remain controversial, the technology behind the study could revolutionize our understanding of literacy and education in Biblical times.

Most scholars agree that the earliest Biblical texts—including the Book of Joshua, Judges, and the two Books of Kings—took shape during what’s known as the late First Temple Period, before Jerusalem fell to the Babylonian king in 586 BCE. But the circumstances surrounding the writing of these texts, including when they were first penned and by how many authors, remain unclear. Curiously enough, texts that have nothing to do with the Bible may shed light on the matter.

Artificial Intelligence Sheds New Light on the Origins of the Bible
Aerial view of the Tel arad fortress, where the inscriptions used in the present study originated. Image: Wikimedia

For instance, during this time period people wrote a wide variety of information down on ceramic pottery shards called ostraca. “These texts are very mundane in nature,” Shaus said, citing military commands and supply orders as some of the more popular topics of discussion.

Aside from how much wine Judahite soldiers required, however, there’s another layer of information we can extract from ostraca: how many people knew how to write. That’s exactly what Shaus and his colleagues did, analyzing a group of 16 well-preserved ceramic shards from a remote military fortress located near the southern border of Judah. Most of these ostraca date to around 600 BCE, practically the eve of the kingdom’s fall.

The first step of this analysis involved the researchers using novel image processing tools to restore characters that had been partially rubbed away. They then developed machine learning algorithms that could compare and contrast the shape of the ancient Hebrew characters in order to identify statistically distinct handwritings. In principle, this is similar to the algorithms tech companies use for digital signature detection.

“Handwriting analysis is a big area that’s seen a lot of research in recent years,” Shaus said. “Nevertheless, we had to develop our own tools and this was quite challenging. The medium is very deteriorated and so is the writing.”

Eventually, the team devised a handwriting recognition tool that worked beautifully on modern Hebrew, and they decided to put it to the test on ancient inscriptions. All in all, their analysis revealed at least six different authors behind the 16 ostraca. Examining the contents of the text itself, the researchers concluded that these authors spanned the entire military chain of command. “The commander down to the lowest water master could all communicate in writing,” Shaus said. “This was an extremely surprising result.”

It’s a result that the researchers say points to a “proliferation of literacy” throughout Judahite society by 600 BCE, implying that the educational infrastructure to support Bible writing almost certainly existed.

But not everyone is comfortable with all aspects of this conclusion.

“This is a highly innovative and important study,” Christopher Rollston, an expert on archaeology and Bible studies at George Washington University told Gizmodo, noting that there’s ample archaeological evidence portions of the Bible were written as early as 800 BCE. But who was really able to write at that time?

“I think that literacy was confined to elites, basically scribes, high military officials, and priests,” Rollston said, adding that by the late First Temple Period, it’s possible reading and writing had spread to more of this upper class.

Perhaps the most important aspect of Shaus’ work is the introduction of sophisticated image recognition technology to the study of ancient texts. The Tel Aviv research group is keen to share their tools for reconstructing letters and deciphering handwriting with other archaeologists. By applying these methods more broadly, we might be able to hone in on when, where, and by whom history’s most enduring book was first written down.

“We’re bringing new evidence to the game,” Shaus said. “Now, we’ll see what else comes out.”

via Gizmodo
Artificial Intelligence Sheds New Light on the Origins of the Bible

OhioHealth’s Dave Blom awarded Columbus Chamber’s top honor

The Columbus Chamber of Commerce gave its top honor, the Columbus Award, this year to OhioHealth Corp. CEO Dave Blom.
"You embody everything this award is meant to be," John McEwan, outgoing chamber chairman, said in presenting the award at Thursday’s annual meeting.
McEwan, managing partner in Columbus for Deloitte LLP, cited Blom’s role in building the $3.3 billion health system to 10 hospitals and one of the region’s largest employers, and as being one of the leaders behind creation of the Columbus…

via Columbus Business News – Local Columbus News | Business First of Columbus
OhioHealth’s Dave Blom awarded Columbus Chamber’s top honor

Whole Foods sets date for Easton opening

The last big retailer for Easton Gateway will open its doors Sept. 2.
Whole Foods Market Inc. Thursday announced that its third Columbus store is about ready for its debut. It will be the 422nd store for the Austin, Texas-based chain of natural and organic grocery stores.
Features at the 45,000-square-foot store will include:
An in-store restaurant serving food aimed at active-living lifestyles. A fresh juice bar. An open seafood department more like fish market set up than a traditional grocery…

via Columbus Business News – Local Columbus News | Business First of Columbus
Whole Foods sets date for Easton opening

BearCam Is Back and It’s Beary, Beary Nice

It’s officially summer, which means the salmon are running in Alaska’s Katami National Park which means the local brown bears are poking around there to eat them which means the BearCam is back up for the season. I just watched for like three minutes and I saw a bear!

See?!

BearCam Is Back and It's Beary, Beary Nice

If the hot bear action is not enough, you can switch to the underwater cam and watch for poor, unsuspecting migrating salmon. (They’re harder to see, but they’re there, see ‘em?)

BearCam Is Back and It's Beary, Beary Nice

If you see a bear you particularly want to remember, you can use the webcam’s tool to take photo. A higher quality image is immediately snapped and shared to the social media outlet of choice. Although after I took this photo of my new friend I didn’t really want to share it with anyone, since it felt like such a special moment.

BearCam Is Back and It's Beary, Beary Nice

I mean, it’s no Condor Cam, but it’ll do nicely for the summer.

[Bears]

via Gizmodo
BearCam Is Back and It’s Beary, Beary Nice