@JaimeObregon ¿No has pasado por el Censo para recojer el certificado que puedes usar previa compulsa de documentos para poder saltarte ese paso? Después tendrías que pasar por la oficina física para que introduzcan manualmente en tu perfil.esos datos y así no tener que haver ese paso
@JaimeObregon Una investigación interesante sería cuanto gasta la administración en almacenaje de copias compulsadas. Si por cada ciudadano requiere compulsa de documentos ... Tiene que tener almacenes de archivos que compitan con los almacenes de Amazon
Most roadmaps are setting up their product teams to fail.
That's because, even today, most roadmaps still follow the dreaded *timeline roadmap* format 😱
And here's why that sucks. THREAD 👇
'Pair Programming' with GPT-2 trained on 2 million GitHub files. Straightforward near-term practical use of deep learning. I wish they had better examples - for example, I bet if you name a variable Gryffindor it will suggest Hufflepuff for the next one!
https://t.co/OrVUMBXIse
@unclebobmartin Writing good code is fairly quick.
Keeping it good is fairly quick.
Writing bad code onto good code is pretty quick.
Living with bad code is ever-slowing.
Stopping to fix a lot of bad code is hella slow.
Never ask permission to refactor. Never ask permission to write tests. You do these things because you KNOW they are the best way to go fast.
When you ask permission, you are asking someone else to take responsibility for your actions.
One of my most controversial software opinions is that your sleep quality and stress level matter far, far more than the languages you use or the practices you follow. Nothing else comes close: not type systems, not TDD, not formal methods, not ANYTHING.
Allow me to explain why.
@fran__sevillano Good one. Comfort zones are personal and maybe your comfort zone is totally out to another person. I like to run away from your comfort zone not to not see it again but instead to see it from another perspective ;)
Spacewalkers Christina Koch (@Astro_Christina) and Nick Hague (@AstroHague) are setting up their work site with the South Atlantic Ocean passing 262 miles below. #AskNASA | https://t.co/yuOTrZ4Jut