Inside the AI-Powered Race to Decode Ancient Roman Scrolls
On a Saturday night in late August, Luke Farritor, a 21-year old computer science student at University of Nebraska-Lincoln, was on his way home from a party at a friend's house in Omaha when he saw something on his phone that he says almost caused him to break into tears and fall to the floor. Farritor had spent the last six months poring over 3D X-rays of ancient scrolls, often for more than 40 hours per week, all alongside internships and his studies. While he was at the party he had received a message informing him that new segments of scanned and virtually flattened scrolls had just been uploaded. With the music blaring around him, he logged onto his PC remotely to set the AI model that he'd built to detect ink from previous scroll scans to work on the new segments and rejoined the party. After driving home, on the walk back to his college dorm from the parking lot, Farritor remembered the scrolls and checked his phone.
Oct-21-2023, 10:00:00 GMT
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