Hay que pedirle disculpas a George Lucas; cuando sacó Episodio 1 nos quejabamos de que "bloquear rutas comerciales" era un argumento pobrísimo para un conflicto de Star Wars.
Aquí estamos, pleno 2026, discutiendo por bloqueos de rutas comerciales.
Recuerdo que alguna vez dije que nadie veria los partidos culeros en un mundial de 48 selecciones pero aqui estoy esperando un Nueva Caledonia-Jamaica DEL REPECHAJE
Acabo de hablar con mi abuela y le comenté que me dió gripa y qué creen que me dijo: “hay que cuidarse para seguir sufriendo, a eso vinimos”. No manchen, me cagué de risa. Mi abuelita le habría encantando Twitter en 2017, cuando todos éramos sadtuiteros.
Arguments almost never change anyone’s mind, because more often than not, people are not defending their stance, they are defending their intelligence. In the heat of an argument, the issue is rarely the issue itself; what is really at stake is the fear of appearing foolish. And so the conversation becomes a performance, not a pursuit of truth.
Change usually happens later, in private, when the person is no longer performing their intelligence for an audience. It happens quietly, when there is no need to protect pride.
That is, if the belief is strong enough to be conceived at all. Ironically, being strong in what you believe demands a certain fragility. True conviction expects you to be secure enough to let it break. The same strength that allows you to hold a belief must also allow you to loosen your grip on it.
Because real strength is not rigidity. It is the confidence to withstand the possibility of being wrong.
So you're telling me we have a bunch of AI companies that say AI writes perfect code, they basically have unlimited funding, the smartest minds in the world, and lots of compute and all we get is a slightly worse LLM every few months
New fastest shortest-path algorithm in 41 years!
Tsinghua researchers broke Dijkstra’s 1984 “sorting barrier,” achieving O(m log^(2/3) n) time. This means faster route planning, less traffic, cheaper deliveries, and more efficient networks - and a CS curriculum revamp =)