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sâmbătă, 14 decembrie 2013

The Roman Conspiracy to Invent Jesus

Who was Jesus?
Why is there no historic archaeological evidence of his existence?

Who wrote the Gospels?
Why were they written in Greek, rather than Hebrew or Aramaic?

How did the Christian religion come to be centered in Rome? Why were the
first Christian pope and earliest saints all members of the Flavius Caesar
ruling family?

This latest ground-breaking work in Christian scholarship reveals a new and revolutionary understanding of the origin of Christianity, explaining what is the New Testament, who is the real Jesus, and how Christ's second coming already occurred. The book Caesar's Messiah shows that Jesus was the invention of the Roman Imperial Court. Their purpose: to offer a vision of a “peaceful Messiah” who would serve as an alternative to the revolutionary leaders who were rocking first-century Israel and threatening Rome. This discovery is based on the parallels found between the Gospels and the works of the historian Josephus, which occur IN SEQUENCE.

Some readers will find this analysis disorienting. Joseph Atwill, author of Caesar's Messiah, says, “My book is in no way a criticism of the faith of contemporary Christians. I felt required to present my findings because of the light they shed on the origin and purpose both of anti-Semitism and the way that governments use propaganda to control their subjects.”
“Challenging and provocative! If what Joseph Atwill is saying is only partially true, we are looking into the abyss.”
— Robert Eisenman,
Professor of Middle East Religions and Archaeology, California State University,
and author of James the Brother of Jesus

         Download Video from YouTube | Convert YouTube to MP3                                                                                                                                                                                                 Source: caesarsmessiah.com

sâmbătă, 7 decembrie 2013

Wozniak: “I Wish To God That Apple And Google Were Partners”

In an interview with The BBC, Steve Wozniak – confounder of Apple – has expressed his desire for Steve Wozniak to team up.
The brains behind Apple, it is obvious that “Woz” (as he is also known) believes that Apple’s shortcomings could be made up via the use of other technologies. Wozniak was critical of Apple’s Siri, for example, and reserved special praise for Google’s own voice recognition service.
“Sometimes I say ‘Go to Joe’s Diner’ and [Siri] doesn’t know where Joe’s Diner is. And very often usually I find out that Android does.”
Wozniak credited Android’s success in this area to Google’s search engine. “That is actually the future of intelligence probably for computers getting smarter and getting artificial intelligence. I wish to God that Apple and Google were partners in the future.”
When asked about the likelihood of an Apple/Google partnership, Wozniak was hesitant: “I don’t know. If I were there, it would be pretty likely. I’m probably wrong, there’s probably an awful lot I don’t know about the business concerns and one thing you’ve got to remember is a company has always got to make money”.
“I believe you should have a world where you’ve got to license something at a fair price. There are good things I see on Samsung phones that I wish were in my iPhone. I wish Apple would use them and could use them, and I don’t know if Samsung would stop us,” he says.
“I wish everybody just did a lot of cross-licensing and sharing the good technology, all our products would be better, we’d go further. I do wish they were more compatible.” Wozniak also posited that a closer working relationship between tech companies would lead to better advances in wearable tech, like smart-watches and augmented reality glasses.
“I want a full smartphone-like capability on my wrist. The trouble is the more I think about it, I don’t want the small size.
“We’re just at the verge of having products that have foldability and flexibility,” he says.
“For about three or four years I’ve been talking about organic LED displays that could be theoretically printed on plastic, wrapped and folded,” he says.
Although Wozniak is no longer an Apple insider, his comments will not doubt be viewed as a challenge to Tim Cook and the new regime.


With iOS 7, Siri Drops Google For Bing, Also Gains Twitter Search

Apple’s new iOS 7 mobile operating system officially rolled out today, and with it, the Siri assistant is finally out of beta. The most significant change to Siri is arguably that it no longer taps into Google for searches. As expected, a deal with Microsoft now makes Bing the default in Siri. Twitter also gets a new place within the tool.

Supporting Role, Not Starring Role, For Bing

After last year’s disaster of iOS 6 switching from Google Maps to Apple’s own maps, Apple might perhaps be downplaying this latest Google swap-out. If you visit the Siri page at Apple, there’s no mention of Bing being used, while Yelp and WolframAlpha, both long-time Siri data partners, get shoutouts:
Apple - iOS 7 - Siri
Of course, one reason Bing doesn’t have a starring role is that Siri has continued to evolve into a tool that tries not to search the web, if it can help it. That same Siri page I’ve noted above also has screenshots about how Siri can be used to do a variety of searches or tasks. An example of using it to search the web is notably absent. This does appear, however, on the help screen within Siri that lists various things it can do.
http://www.flickr.com//photos/nichitus/sets/72157629818651386/show/

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