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621  Local / עברית (Hebrew) / Israeli archeologists say they have discovered King David’s palace on: July 21, 2013, 05:19:06 PM
http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2013/07/21/israeli_archeologists_say_they_have_discovered_king_davids_palace.html


Quote
By: Max J. Rosenthal The Associated Press, Published on Sun Jul 21 2013

JERUSALEM — A team of Israeli archeologists believes it has discovered the ruins of a palace belonging to the biblical King David, but other Israeli experts dispute the claim.

Archeologists from Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Israel’s Antiquities Authority said their find, a large fortified complex west of Jerusalem at a site called Khirbet Qeiyafa, is the first palace of the biblical king ever to be discovered.

“Khirbet Qeiyafa is the best example exposed to date of a fortified city from the time of King David,” said Yossi Garfinkel, a Hebrew University archeologist, suggesting that David himself would have used the site. Garfinkel led the seven-year dig with Saar Ganor of Israel’s Antiquities Authority.

Garfinkel said his team found cultic objects typically used by Judeans, the subjects of King David, and saw no trace of pig remains. Pork is forbidden under Jewish dietary laws. Clues like these, he said, were “unequivocal evidence” that David and his descendants had ruled at the site.

Critics said the site could have belonged to other kingdoms of the area. The consensus among most scholars is that no definitive physical proof of the existence of King David has been found.

Biblical archeology itself is contentious. Israelis often use archeological findings to back up their historic claims to sites that are also claimed by the Palestinians, like the Old City of Jerusalem. Despite extensive archeological evidence, for example, Palestinians deny that the biblical Jewish Temples dominated the hilltop where the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, Islam’s third-holiest site, stands today.

In general, researchers are divided over whether biblical stories can be validated by physical remains.

The current excavators are not the first to claim they found a King David palace. In 2005, Israeli archeologist Eilat Mazar said she found the remains of King David’s palace in Jerusalem dating to the 10th century B.C., when King David would have ruled. Her claim also attracted skepticism, including from Garfinkel himself.

Using carbon dating, the archeologists traced the site’s construction to that same period. Garfinkel said the team also found a storeroom almost 15 metres long, suggesting it was a royal site used to collect taxes from the rest of the kingdom.

Garfinkel believes King David lived permanently in Jerusalem in a yet-undiscovered site, only visiting Khirbet Qeiyafa or other palaces for short periods. He said the site’s placement on a hill indicates that the ruler sought a secure site on high ground during a violent era of frequent conflicts between city-states.

“The time of David was the first time that a large portion of this area was united by one monarch,” Garfinkel said. “It was not a peaceful era.”

Archeologist Israel Finkelstein of Tel Aviv University agreed that Khirbet Qeiyafa is an “elaborate” and “well-fortified” 10th century B.C. site, but said it could have been built by Philistines, Canaanites or other peoples in the area.

He said there was no way to verify who built the site without finding a monument detailing the accomplishments of the king who built it. Last week, for instance, archeologists in Israel found pieces of a sphinx bearing the name of the Egyptian pharaoh who reigned when the statue was carved.

Garfinkel insisted that critics like Finkelstein are relying on outdated theories.

“I think other people have a collapsed theory and we have fresh data,” he said.
622  Other / Off-topic / Israeli archeologists say they have discovered King David’s palace on: July 21, 2013, 05:16:39 PM
http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2013/07/21/israeli_archeologists_say_they_have_discovered_king_davids_palace.html


Quote
By: Max J. Rosenthal The Associated Press, Published on Sun Jul 21 2013

JERUSALEM — A team of Israeli archeologists believes it has discovered the ruins of a palace belonging to the biblical King David, but other Israeli experts dispute the claim.

Archeologists from Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Israel’s Antiquities Authority said their find, a large fortified complex west of Jerusalem at a site called Khirbet Qeiyafa, is the first palace of the biblical king ever to be discovered.

“Khirbet Qeiyafa is the best example exposed to date of a fortified city from the time of King David,” said Yossi Garfinkel, a Hebrew University archeologist, suggesting that David himself would have used the site. Garfinkel led the seven-year dig with Saar Ganor of Israel’s Antiquities Authority.

Garfinkel said his team found cultic objects typically used by Judeans, the subjects of King David, and saw no trace of pig remains. Pork is forbidden under Jewish dietary laws. Clues like these, he said, were “unequivocal evidence” that David and his descendants had ruled at the site.

Critics said the site could have belonged to other kingdoms of the area. The consensus among most scholars is that no definitive physical proof of the existence of King David has been found.

Biblical archeology itself is contentious. Israelis often use archeological findings to back up their historic claims to sites that are also claimed by the Palestinians, like the Old City of Jerusalem. Despite extensive archeological evidence, for example, Palestinians deny that the biblical Jewish Temples dominated the hilltop where the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, Islam’s third-holiest site, stands today.

In general, researchers are divided over whether biblical stories can be validated by physical remains.

The current excavators are not the first to claim they found a King David palace. In 2005, Israeli archeologist Eilat Mazar said she found the remains of King David’s palace in Jerusalem dating to the 10th century B.C., when King David would have ruled. Her claim also attracted skepticism, including from Garfinkel himself.

Using carbon dating, the archeologists traced the site’s construction to that same period. Garfinkel said the team also found a storeroom almost 15 metres long, suggesting it was a royal site used to collect taxes from the rest of the kingdom.

Garfinkel believes King David lived permanently in Jerusalem in a yet-undiscovered site, only visiting Khirbet Qeiyafa or other palaces for short periods. He said the site’s placement on a hill indicates that the ruler sought a secure site on high ground during a violent era of frequent conflicts between city-states.

“The time of David was the first time that a large portion of this area was united by one monarch,” Garfinkel said. “It was not a peaceful era.”

Archeologist Israel Finkelstein of Tel Aviv University agreed that Khirbet Qeiyafa is an “elaborate” and “well-fortified” 10th century B.C. site, but said it could have been built by Philistines, Canaanites or other peoples in the area.

He said there was no way to verify who built the site without finding a monument detailing the accomplishments of the king who built it. Last week, for instance, archeologists in Israel found pieces of a sphinx bearing the name of the Egyptian pharaoh who reigned when the statue was carved.

Garfinkel insisted that critics like Finkelstein are relying on outdated theories.

“I think other people have a collapsed theory and we have fresh data,” he said.
623  Economy / Goods / Re: [WTB] Publix Sweet Tea on: July 20, 2013, 10:48:34 PM
I have heard that you can call other stores and have them ship it to you, I was considering doing this for some polski wyrob pickles that you can only get up north (my mom used to get them for us in the 70's, 80's), but alas can only ship in 2-5 gallon buckets worth. I looooove those pickles but 2-5 gallons of them, no thanks.
624  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: This bitcoin transaction was received in 1972... what? on: July 20, 2013, 05:17:56 PM
How does this happen?

http://blockchain.info/tx/ebfbf928e861abd8c29e8123174f1f65e8a0ccf792b4a2c4bc5cba43b2a74160

I kind of understand that bitcoin miner's stamp the transactions with their own time... but accuracy doesn't matter at all, why do we even bother? Can someone explain this to me?

-Chris

Quote
Warning! this transaction is a double spend of 74058000. You should be extremely careful when trusting any transactions to/from this sender.
625  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Current Best Solution To Accept Bitcoin Payments on Wordpress Site? on: July 20, 2013, 02:08:45 PM
I cannot vouch for any of these but here are a couple:

http://wordpress.org/plugins/tags/bitcoin
626  Bitcoin / Press / 2013-07-19 - PandoDaily - We will soon see btc denominated vc funds on: July 20, 2013, 01:05:36 PM
http://pandodaily.com/2013/07/19/prediction-we-will-soon-see-bitcoin-denominated-vc-funds/
627  Other / Off-topic / Re: Malware Hidden Inside JPG EXIF Headers on: July 20, 2013, 12:59:46 PM
Sounds scary. Soon .txt files won't be safe to use. Sad

well, you can hide just about anything inside its alt stream, how to execute it is another story though.
628  Bitcoin / Press / 2013-07-19 IM - Bitcoin Mining Affiliate Program Pays Per Mass Malware Infection on: July 20, 2013, 02:13:12 AM
http://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/view/33552/bitcoin-mining-affiliate-program-pays-per-mass-malware-infection/

Quote
Security researcher Brian Krebs took a look at the well-structured FeodalCash initiative, which pays people to install malware that turns machines into bots for mining machines for the Bitcoin virtual currency. Mining is the hardware-intensive (but not, strictly speaking, illegal) process of creating new Bitcoins by adding transaction records to Bitcoin's public ledger of past transactions.
629  Other / Meta / Re: 2-factor authentication for the forum on: July 19, 2013, 11:52:34 PM
yes, please add it.
630  Bitcoin / Mining software (miners) / Re: BitMinter client (Win/Linux/Mac, NEW: BFL ASIC and Block Erupter USB supported) on: July 19, 2013, 05:03:23 PM
Hey, Doc - love the client, and am eagerly awaiting LTC support, since I can't seem to get my rigs doing anything in that realm with cgminer for some arcane reason.

I've been looking at the CDF's for weeks, and I'm pretty sure that they are not evenly distributed. There are far too many in the 90th percentile and 10th percentile than would be expected... Any idea why that might be? Are we doing something wrong, somehow? I'll post real data later today, for you to look at...

Thanks, again, for a wonderful client!
-- DickMS

I'm on similar situation.  Tried some LTC clients, but couldn't get them to run.  I've stopped BTC mining at this point...may consider again if/when bitminter comes out with an LTC minter.

Stopped my 2 gpu's today as well, .0197 per day just isnt gonna cut it.

If you want to mine litecoin, I coded a guiminer that's in my sig.

I couldn't get this LTC client to run on two PC's I tried.  I'm kind of liking the peace not hearing them GPU fans roaring nonstop.  The profit was really minimal in either BTC or LTC for the pain involved.  The bitminter java client was the painless one of the bunch, but alas, no LTC support and not worth running on GPU's anymore.

ditto, plus the wife was complaining about the electricity bill! hosted only for me from here on out.
631  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Mining (Altcoins) / Re: Swedish ASIC miner company kncminer.com on: July 19, 2013, 03:25:02 PM
can any EE's chime in on the technical details of what we are looking at?




632  Bitcoin / Group buys / Re: [Groupbuy] 3rd batch KNCMiner - 202/240 shares sold 1/5 miners sold! on: July 19, 2013, 03:14:03 PM
Good news from KnC. They released more R&D info

https://www.kncminer.com/news/news-25

Quote
We have part of an internal presentation we would like to share with you today. While it contains some technically sensitive information (which we have not released earlier for competitive reasons). We believe it’s now in the best interests of our customers  for us to release this information.

The below slides contain information relating the physical setup of the chip and the internal layout of the device. The biggest news is that we can confirm that our chips will have a quad core solution.















great news, thank you!
633  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2012-12-13 Ericsson M-commerce Blog - Bitcoin and the value of money on: July 19, 2013, 02:00:37 PM
full text pdf,
http://kth.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:618145/FULLTEXT01.pdf
634  Bitcoin / Group buys / Re: [Groupbuy] 3rd batch KNCMiner - Just opened! 88/240 shares sold 1/5 miners sold! on: July 19, 2013, 12:51:43 AM
I am planning on purchasing an additional 15 shares, by next friday.

That should be possible Smiley

thanks blastbob, the way i figure it, this should get me up to 100gh!
635  Bitcoin / Group buys / Re: [Groupbuy] 3rd batch KNCMiner - Just opened! 88/240 shares sold 1/5 miners sold! on: July 18, 2013, 11:41:14 PM
I am planning on purchasing an additional 15 shares, by next friday.
636  Other / Off-topic / Re: Normal Sky VS GeoEngineered Sky on: July 18, 2013, 10:15:36 PM

637  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: [ANN] The first regulated Bitcoin Real Estate Investment Fund (REIT) on: July 18, 2013, 07:54:10 PM
possibly relevant:
http://m.techcrunch.com/2013/07/17/realcrowd/?icid=tc__art&
638  Other / Meta / Re: Can we delete our accounts? on: July 18, 2013, 06:08:01 PM
so that if we leave, the account doesnt get resurrected by some scumbag and extort or scam others.
639  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Off-Topic on: July 18, 2013, 01:36:29 AM
Unfortunately TH is very sluggish in this - I tried to make a deal with btceic and another member with no success...
If KnC succeeds along with Bitfury and maybe AMC and/or labcoin, I don't think I will look again back at TH...
That's why customers need variety of choices - then totally unacceptable and unproffesional behaviors like these are harshly punished!

fyi all, I received my full refund today with no dispute by terrahash, (they never replied to the claim) and as previously stated will now stfu about it, which I am sure many of you will be happy about.

klee,
I appreciate you trying to work with terrahash on this issue with me.

I wish you all the best of luck.

Nice to hear you got it all worked out Btceic.

thanks kl999
640  Bitcoin / Mining software (miners) / Re: BitMinter client (Win/Linux/Mac, NEW: BFL ASIC and Block Erupter USB supported) on: July 18, 2013, 01:09:42 AM
Hey, Doc - love the client, and am eagerly awaiting LTC support, since I can't seem to get my rigs doing anything in that realm with cgminer for some arcane reason.

I've been looking at the CDF's for weeks, and I'm pretty sure that they are not evenly distributed. There are far too many in the 90th percentile and 10th percentile than would be expected... Any idea why that might be? Are we doing something wrong, somehow? I'll post real data later today, for you to look at...

Thanks, again, for a wonderful client!
-- DickMS

I'm on similar situation.  Tried some LTC clients, but couldn't get them to run.  I've stopped BTC mining at this point...may consider again if/when bitminter comes out with an LTC minter.

Stopped my 2 gpu's today as well, .0197 per day just isnt gonna cut it.
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