Before creating modern envelopes, they used to fold letters in a complex way to make communication as safe as possible. Now, Jana Dambrogio, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has managed to read dozens of letters from the Brienne collection without touching the cards.
Thanks to the X-rays and a folding algorithm, he has been able to virtually uncover the letters that have been folded for 300 years. The opening of cards and other well-folded documents is often a danger due to their frequent deterioration, a technology that makes it possible to know the contents of many documents without destroying the heritage.
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The consumerist culture we live in sends every user to an unreasonable enjoyment. As Slavoj Zize says, Enjoy your fetish, it has become the rude mandate of hypermodernity. Current enjoyment is carried out through existing technological devices to occupy the place of fetish. But... [+]
In 2018, I leveraged social media and most communications from devices to try to control where I focus on life. Every day I go on that task, in the light of the moth, because my curiosity is constantly looking for fresh information to help me understand reality. At that time I... [+]