I want to help enable discoveries in Egyptology.
So I built an MCP server that hands AI agents real hieroglyph data: the full Unicode/Gardiner/JSesh/IFAO sign crosswalk (5,067 signs) + Manuel de Codage parsing — instead of letting them hallucinate.
Same approach already took my cuneiform work into peer review. 𓂀
Going to bed while 50 AI agents stay up all night doing XRPL forensics to figure out which "anonymous" whales are just one guy with 40 wallets and a dream.
I love the future.
there's a typhoon hitting Japan so I built a thing 🌀
live radar, satellite, wind particles, real planes flying around it, a counter for how many million people are in its path, point-your-phone AR, and a WebGL flythrough into the eye
it also works out which past typhoon it's basically cosplaying — right now, Toraji (2013)
👉 https://t.co/mV1SwKHq71
anyway. good morning
I made an open tool that reads 4,000-year-old clay tablets and goes "wait… THIS scribe totally copied THAT scribe's homework." It's fluent in Akkadian. Now I'm teaching it Sumerian — 91,000 more tablets — so nobody's plagiarism is safe, not even from 2000 BC. 🏺Anyway. This is what I do for fun.
I'm moving on from monitoring tools to build purposeful hardware devices. I already have offline multisig nodes that I've shared with a few people @xrpl_commons, and this project is evolving into a practical air-gapped hardware signer for #XRPL.
It lets users safely curate and submit transactions directly from the device without exposing their seed to a phone or computer.
🤖 Spent today shipping 29 new research tools for the world's oldest written library — about 36,000 ancient Mesopotamian clay tablets scattered across 138 museum collections.
The wild part: AI agents in parallel. Six waves, three tools built simultaneously each wave, all clean compile + production-ready. ⚡
Some of what the tools do, in plain English:
🧩 Find "lost sibling" tablets — same ancient text copied multiple times, copies scattered across museums in different countries. The tool finds them automatically.
✍️ Recognize the same scribe's handwriting across tablets. Today the tools surfaced a four-tablet "scribal quartet" — all written by the same ancient hand, sitting in different modern collections.
🏛️ Identify physical-join candidates — broken pieces of one originally-whole tablet, re-catalogued as separate items. Sometimes they can be fit back together.
📜 Search by city, genre, publication. "Every Sippar tablet." "Every purification ritual." "Every untranslated fragment in CT volume 23."
4,000-year-old library + AI co-pilots = finally browsable like a database, not a fragmented mess across 200 years of archaeology.
“Just made it official! My business is now officially incorporated with all the paperwork and seals to prove it. Excited to take this next big step. Grateful for everyone who’s been part of the journey so far. Let’s grow! 🚀”