

This version of the Kirishitan Monogatari is available via the National Diet Library Digital Collections. I imagine that the reader will already have a text in mind, but for the sake of this tutorial we will use the second volume of the 1639 version of the Kirishitan Monogatari 吉利支丹物語 due to its relation to my own research. Next we need to find an image of a document written in cursive Japanese text that we want to convert to printed text. The KuroNet Kuzushiji Recognition Viewer after signing in. Once you’ve logged in your name will appear in the top right corner of the screen. You can sign in with Google, Facebook, Twitter or Email. The KuroNet Kuzushiji Recognition Viewer/ IIIF Curation Viewer.Īfter opening the viewer one needs to log into an account. First, one needs to open the KuroNet Kuzushiji Recognition Viewer/IIIF Curation Viewer which will look something like this: Unless I am mistaken, instructions do not appear to be available in other languages, although parts of the interface can be used in English or Japanese. The instructions for KuroNet are available in Japanese, here. After trying out the software, I decided that this week I would write a brief tutorial and review of KuroNet. Of course, I knew long before I tried it that it must be something special since the post-launch hype in the worlds of both traditional and social media was immense. I often live by this philosophy in my digitally oriented work, so when KuroNet was launched I decided to wait a while before using it.


#Japanese iconographer software#
Would this be another of the terribly ineffective, free, Japanese OCR platforms that seem to abound on the internet or would it actually work? When I was a teenager my friend’s father who was a computer engineer told me to never jump on software or OS updates as soon as they are released, but to wait a while until bugs and other such faults are worked out. It was a development that I and many others waited for in anticipation, excitement and perhaps to some extent apprehension.
#Japanese iconographer free#
KuroNet is a free OCR (Optical Character Recognition) platform which allows users to convert images of documents written in cursive Japanese into printed text. The Center for Open Data in the Humanities’ KuroNet Kuzushiji Ninshiki Sābisu (KuroNetくずし字認識サービス) launched late last year. Digital Orientalist’s 2022 Conference “Infrastructures”.The Digital Orientalist’s Virtual Workshop and Conference 2021.
