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Ancient sample of writing found in Israel

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (UPI) Jul 14, 2010
Archaeologists say a clay fragment excavated outside Jerusalem's Old City walls shows writing from the 14th century B.C., the oldest ever found in the city.

The find, believed to be part of a tablet from a royal archive, further confirms the status of Jerusalem as a major city in the late Bronze Age, long before its conquest by King David, a Hebrew University of Jerusalem release said Sunday.

The fragment, about 1 inch by 1 1/2 inch and about 1/4 inch thick, appears to have been part of a tablet and contains cuneiform symbols in the ancient Akkadian language of that era, the release said.

The script is of a very high level, suggesting it was written by a highly skilled scribe who probably prepared tablets for the royal household of the time, said Prof. Wayne Horowitz, a scholar of Assyriology at the Hebrew University Institute of Archaeology.

Tablets with diplomatic messages were commonly exchanged between kings in the ancient Near East, Horowitz said, and there is a good chance the fragment was part of such a "royal missive."

earlier related report
US author journeys from Twitter to print
Washington (AFP) July 14, 2010 - A San Francisco-based writer who first published his novel on Twitter -- all 95,000 words of it -- was celebrating Bastille Day on Wednesday with the launch of a print version of his book.

"It's a lot easier to read this way," Matt Stewart said of the traditional paper format of his debut novel, "The French Revolution," published by Soft Skull Press.

"I don't blame anybody for holding out for the book," he said.

Stewart said it took about four months to "tweet" the entire 300-page book -- a project he began on Bastille Day a year ago -- and "around 5,000 tweets."

"It was an ordeal," Stewart said, adding that the 140-character Twitter format turned out not to be particularly "user-friendly" for a full-length novel.

Stewart, 31, describes his book as a "San Francisco family saga, loosely structured on the radical events of the historical French Revolution" that combines "vivid language, elements of fantasy and farce and raunchy humor."

The San Francisco Chronicle favorably compared it to John Kennedy Toole's 1980 classic "A Confederacy of Dunces."

"Stewart's book shares many of its best qualities with Toole's picaresque comedy: Both are deeply satirical and affectionate portraits of a city in all its messy, multiethnic splendor, seen through queasy glimpses over the fleshy shoulders of its obese, big-mouthed protagonist," the Chronicle said.

Stewart said the Twitter exercise was about "finding new ways to reach an audience" and he is continuing his literary and digital experimentation with the launch of the print version of "The French Revolution."

He teamed up with Ricoh Innovations to produce a free companion iPhone application to the book.

"One thing I've always been intrigued by is adding kind of bonus features to books, much like a movie DVD has deleted scenes or interviews," Stewart said.

"Right now, books on iPad do a lot of this," he said. "They can have embedded content and do some pretty cool things.

"But the reality is most people aren't reading books on iPads," he said. "I'm attempting to kind of bridge that gap between paper and digital content.

"I love the concept of clickable paper," he added. "You can combine your smartphone with standard text and bring it to life."

The iPhone application gives readers access to bonus content such as videos and extra chapters by zapping any page in the book with their iPhone camera.

"I went around San Francisco to a lot of locations that were featured in the book," Stewart said. "I show actual locations. I talk about my inspiration for those scenes.

"There are a lot of recipes featured in the book so I also have recipes," he said.

Stewart said the bonus content in the iPhone application is "there to enhance the story if you feel like it.

"The story holds up just fine without it," he said. "But it's there if you want it."



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Japan's DoCoMo plans new app platform for phones
Tokyo (AFP) July 9, 2010
Japan's number one mobile phone operator NTT DoCoMo has said it will add a new application platform to its "i-mode" handsets this year as it tries to catch up with Apple's runaway iPhone success. NTT DoCoMo will allow third-party individuals to develop applications for the company's 50 million "i-mode" users, spokeswoman Makiko Furuta said. DoCoMo revolutionised Japan's mobile phone mark ... read more







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