felixbraun 3 hours ago

Excellent work — reminds me of similar projects built with the same tech stack:

– Coins: A journey through the Münzkabinett Berlin collection (one of the largest in the world). https://uclab.fh-potsdam.de/coins/

– Theodor Fontane Marginalia: A visualization of Fontane’s marginalia and notes in his personal library. https://uclab.fh-potsdam.de/ff/

Isamu 10 hours ago

If you get an opportunity to see them in person, it’s worth it because the fine details are that much more impressive up close. Every photo I’ve seen is not as good. Also the illustration is tinier than you would think.

whatever1 12 hours ago

How much talent can fit in a person? This is how much.

  • nunodonato 11 hours ago

    indeed! The biography of Leonardo was an amazing read. Highly recommend it

    • proee 9 hours ago

      Can you recommend the author?

      • nunodonato 7 hours ago

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonardo_da_Vinci_(Isaacson_bo...

        The same author who wrote some other famous biographies. I know some people prefer other DaVinci's biographies. I didn't read others to be able to compare, but I really enjoyed this one.

        • kragen 6 hours ago

          Nitpick: "da Vinci" wasn't our homeboy's name. That just means "from Vinci". He was "Leonardo", like many other people, so we added "da Vinci" to clarify which Leonardo we meant, just like you might say, "Jessica from church came by," to clarify that you didn't mean Jessica the ex-girlfriend. Surnames weren't very widely used in Italy then.

          It's like "Jesus of Nazareth"; you wouldn't talk about "other OfNazareth's biographies". Ain't grammatical.

          • cma 5 hours ago

            It's fine. John Smith once meant the John who works as a blacksmith etc. Whatever the original meaning we now widely take da Vinci to be the last name if we don't speak Italian.

            • dragonwriter 41 minutes ago

              > John Smith once meant the John who works as a blacksmith etc.

              Yes, modern surnames largely evolved from descriptive epithets added to distinguish different people of the same given name, but that doesn't retroactively transform the descriptive epithets of commonly applied to people who lived in the past into surnames for those people.

            • kragen 4 hours ago

              I agree that the error is common. Try to make new errors instead of repeating common errors.

              • card_zero 3 hours ago

                Does this also apply to DiCaprio? His name seems to translate as "the deer's Leonardo", or maybe "the goat's Leonardo". Possibly "son of a goat".

                Wikipedia says that Leonardo da Vinci was properly Leonardo son of Piero from Vinci son of Antonio son of another Piero son of Guido. I'm not sure that moving to surnames was a mistake, you know.

                • kragen 3 hours ago

                  Nope, that's his actual surname. He wasn't born in the 16th century.

                  • card_zero 3 hours ago

                    But at some point back in time, when an ancestral DiCaprio was first referred to as just "DiCaprio", that was an error, right? He should properly be called Quello Figlio di Caprio, that son of a goat. It's not too late.

                    • kragen 2 hours ago

                      Probably not, no, and AFAIK Leo is a nice guy who doesn't deserve to be deprecated in that way.

              • cma 44 minutes ago

                Descriptive linguistics, how stuff is actually used, is a lot more useful in practical real-life communication vs prescriptive.

                Da Vinci is a shorthand that everyone will understand vs just calling him Leonardo. Writing Leonardo da Vinci will be more explicit but will come off much more formal and stilted.

                • kragen 42 minutes ago

                  Nobody who knew Leonardo called him "da Vinci", any more than you would call Jessica "from church" ("Hey, is From Church coming over tonight?") or Venezuelans would call Hugo Chávez Frias "Mr. Frias". "Descriptive linguistics" is not a magic trump password that makes all erroneous utterances correct. If you haven't studied 16th-century Italian, you're going to make errors when you name 16th-century Italians.

kragen 16 hours ago

This is beautiful! I am having some difficulty with the UI; is there a torrent? Images like https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/500/000R-1.jpg are too low in resolution for good archival; you can't even read the writing.

  • trvz 16 hours ago

    Manipulate the URL for a higher resolution:

      https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/2000/000R-1.jpg
    
    You don't need to depend on others to create a torrent, as bestowed upon you was the power of wget!

      wget https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/2000/000R-{1..1119}.jpg
      wget https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/2000/000V-{1..1119}.jpg
    • kragen 6 hours ago

      Thanks! On my cellphone not even enough of the UI was working for me to discover those URLs. I suspect a certain amount of error recovery is in order for wgetting all 2238 images. 2000 seems to be the maximum resolution available, which is under 100dpi. A few of the images seem to have been uploaded to https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Codex_Atlanticus.

      There are a couple of scans of a 43-page Italian edition published by Ulrico Hoepli on the Archive: https://archive.org/details/codex-atlanticus-leonardo-da-vin... https://archive.org/details/codex-atlanticus-leonardo-da-vin... but they seem to be of very poor quality.

      I'm done downloading now (with a sleep of 1 second between pages), and I have 1064125470 bytes of JPEG files, a very reasonably torrentable size. I'll see if I can put together a torrent and upload to the Archive and Commons...

    • WithinReason 11 hours ago

      Or in PowerShell on Windows:

        1..1119 | % { iwr "https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/2000/000R-$_.jpg" -OutFile "000R-$_.jpg" }
        1..1119 | % { iwr "https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/2000/000V-$_.jpg" -OutFile "000V-$_.jpg" }
      • embedding-shape 8 hours ago

        Some people around me swear PowerShell has better user experience than unix shells, but then I keep seeing examples like these. How on earth could people prefer this compared to `wget https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/2000/000V-{1.....`?

        • kragen 6 hours ago

          In this case presumably the main difference is not PowerShell vs. bash but iwr vs. wget? Because I think this is roughly equally bad (untested):

              for page in {1..1119}; do
                  iwr "https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/2000/000R-$page.jpg" -OutFile "000R-$page.jpg"
                  iwr "https://codex-atlanticus.ambrosiana.it/assets/2000/000V-$page.jpg" -OutFile "000V-$page.jpg"
              done
          
          Also until recently bash didn't have {42..53} syntax. You had to use `seq`. There was an alternative name for `seq` in Unix Power Tools, `jot`, because it wasn't standard: https://docstore.mik.ua/orelly/unix/upt/ch45_11.htm. This section was by ORA author and sysadmin Linda Mui (https://www.oreilly.com/pub/au/268), but I don't know if she wrote `jot` or just popularized it.
    • NoMoreNicksLeft 15 hours ago

      Any idea on how to best compile it to an ebook? Just stuffing the jpgs into a pdf rarely works well...

      • foofoo12 12 hours ago

        I usually do what rarely doesn't work well for you, but it works decently for me. You get 1 page per image and the image isn't compressed or touched at all.

          apt install img2pdf
          img2pdf *.jpg -o leonardo-da-book.pdf
        • nunodonato 11 hours ago

          wouldnt this mess up the order? I think you are supposed to view it like R1, V2, R2, V2, etc

          • foofoo12 11 hours ago

            Yes, this was just an example. Using wildcard expansion will give you whatever order the your current shell seems fit. Bash does alphabetical order.

            • kragen 6 hours ago

              More like

                  echo $(for page in {1..1119}; do for side in R V; do
                    echo "000$side-$page.jpg"; done; done)
      • ticulatedspline 4 hours ago

        Easy way would be to just drop them in a zip and label it .cbz. Most readers handle CBR/CBZ just fine.

        • kragen 3 hours ago

          Oh, is .cbz that simple? Does it use the file order of the zipfile members or some other order? (https://acbf.fandom.com/wiki/ACBF_Editor_-_Creating_Metadata says it uses alphabetical order, which is the wrong order in this case.)

          It may be useful to use zip -Z store. JPEG data isn't going to get much benefit from another layer of LZ77.

      • c0balt 14 hours ago

        I haven't that done this in some time, but templating some markdown code for pandoc and creating an ebup might be a viable avenue.

        • kragen 6 hours ago

          Maybe what rarely works well for NoMoreNicksLeft is having a gigabyte of JPEGs in a single HTML chapter inside the epub? In that case you could do something like divide the files into 373 "chapters" of 6 pages each?

          One of the fragmentary editions I linked on the Archive uses the .cbr Comic Book Reader format; perhaps that is a better format than .epub for high-resolution scans of every page?

        • NoMoreNicksLeft 9 hours ago

          Oooh... I have even less luck with epub, when the pages are an image-per-page.

      • atoav 9 hours ago

        Calibre comes with a ebook-convert command, that one might work

      • eMPee584 12 hours ago

        ocrmypdf (rocks!)

nunodonato 11 hours ago

amazing! The categorization is nice, but I would love to see some sort of "tag cloud" that would allow use to view more specific content. How long until someone creates a tool to RAG the hell out of this? :)

vim-guru 14 hours ago

Why are some of the pages upside down?

  • embedding-shape 8 hours ago

    It's a bit bananas, but probably just because he could. He also wrote his personal notes in "mirror writing":

    > The notes on Leonardo da Vinci's famous Vitruvian Man image are in mirror writing. Leonardo da Vinci wrote most of his personal notes in mirror writing, only using standard writing if he intended his texts to be read by others

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

  • foofoo12 12 hours ago

    Da Vinci was showing off.

  • b34k3r 12 hours ago

    just rotate your monitor

MangoToupe 6 hours ago

> We use it to express mild surprise that one person could use both their left and right hemispheres equally well.

When did this myth become so perpetuated? It's infuriating. I blame university administration. I can't think of any other reason to so firmly distinguish different areas of thought.

NaomiLehman 5 hours ago

I'm training a model based on this /s