and that's where in the k jimenez and his team at the university of munich come in, they've developed a platform that used as part of visual intelligence to match up even very tiny fragments of tablets in record time. the approach has sparked a revolution in the field. in the past, researchers spent years deciphering and translating countless cuneiform tablets in different museums. discovering missing fragments often came down to lock. you could take decades to reconstruct a single text menu. so like the text when it took so long to reconstruct a text, it could mean that a researcher might die without having published the text or reading it and fall into it. yeah, fortunately, that's no longer the case. the for now all the existing text can be access to basically it's also very easy to find them and reconstruct something then eh, a on the, to the customer item. since 2018 the team in munich has been developing the electronic, babylonian library, or l for short. it's a kind of search engine for cuneiform tablets. with the help of a i even tiny fragments can be assigned to known text. a