🔥🇲🇽 ¡ISAAC DEL TORO ES CAMPEÓN DEL TOUR AUVERGNE-RHÔNE-ALPES 2026!
Lo que parecía una misión imposible terminó en una hazaña histórica. Tras superar una lesión que amenazó con frenar su temporada, Isaac del Toro protagonizó una remontada espectacular para conquistar el título y confirmar que es una de las grandes figuras del ciclismo mundial. 🚴♂️🏆
Con talento, carácter y un corazón enorme, el mexicano volvió a demostrar que está hecho para las grandes gestas. ❤️🇲🇽
¡Otra victoria, otro trofeo y otra página dorada para el deporte mexicano! 🌟
The week starts tomorrow. 🇩🇪
One German word to carry into it:
𝗗𝗿𝗮𝗻𝗯𝗹𝗲𝗶𝗯𝗲𝗻.
= to stick with it. To stay on it. To not let go.
𝘥𝘳𝘢𝘯 = on it. 𝘣𝘭𝘦𝘪𝘣𝘦𝘯 = to stay.
Not to rush. Not to force.
Just to stay on the thing.
Whatever you are building - the language, the habit, the goal you keep circling back to —
it does not need you to be perfect this week.
It needs you to 𝘥𝘳𝘢𝘯𝘣𝘭𝘦𝘪𝘣𝘦𝘯.
Stay on it.
𝘎𝘶𝘵𝘦 𝘕𝘢𝘤𝘩𝘵. 🌙🇩🇪
20 ways to say "I am..." in German 🇩🇪
✅ Ich bin bereit ➖ I'm ready
⏰ Ich bin spät dran ➖ I'm late
⬅️ Ich bin zurück ➖ I'm back
📍 Ich bin hier ➖ I'm here
😜 Ich scherze ➖ I'm joking
😴 Ich bin müde ➖ I'm tired
😍 Ich bin verliebt ➖ I'm in love
🤒 Ich bin krank ➖ I'm sick
🤔 Ich denke ➖ I think
🕰️ Ich warte ➖ I wait
🥶 Mir ist kalt ➖ I'm cold
🥵 Mir ist heiß ➖ I'm hot
🥰 Ich bin glücklich ➖ I'm happy
😢 Ich bin traurig ➖ I'm sad
😡 Ich bin wütend ➖ I'm angry
🤗 Ich bin zufrieden ➖ I'm satisfied
🤓 Ich bin neugierig ➖ I'm curious
🤭 Ich bin überrascht ➖ I'm surprised
🤐 Ich bin still ➖ I'm quiet
😎 Ich bin entspannt ➖ I'm relaxed
𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗻 𝗚𝗲𝗿𝗺𝗮𝗻 𝗦𝗶𝗺𝗽𝗹𝘆 🇩🇪
¿Sabías que en México existe un cráter de casi 300 metros de profundidad que tiene su propio microclima y parece un mundo escondido dentro de otro mundo?
Se llama La Joya Honda y está en San Luis Potosí. A primera vista parece el impacto de un meteorito gigante, pero en realidad nació hace más de un millón de años cuando el magma entró en contacto con agua subterránea y provocó una explosión tan poderosa que abrió esta enorme cavidad en la tierra.
Lo más sorprendente es que al descender hacia el interior del cráter, la vegetación cambia. Mientras afuera domina el paisaje semidesértico, dentro se desarrolla un ecosistema diferente gracias a las condiciones particulares que genera su profundidad. Por eso muchos visitantes sienten que están entrando a otro lugar completamente distinto.
Durante décadas, su origen fue motivo de todo tipo de teorías. Algunos aseguraban que era un cráter de meteorito, otros hablaban de fenómenos inexplicables y hasta de objetos voladores no identificados. La realidad resultó ser igual de fascinante: La Joya Honda es uno de los mejores ejemplos de un cráter volcánico tipo maar en México.
Los antiguos huachichiles consideraban este lugar sagrado y con el paso del tiempo las leyendas no han dejado de crecer. Quizá porque cuando estás frente a sus enormes paredes y observas ese gigantesco círculo perfecto excavado en la tierra, entiendes por qué tantas historias nacieron aquí.
México está lleno de lugares que parecen sacados de otro planeta, y La Joya Honda es uno de esos sitios que demuestran que a veces las maravillas más impresionantes están mucho más cerca de lo que imaginamos.
📍La Joya Honda, San Luis Potosí. ¿Ya la conocías?
📸 IG: memo_cardenas_l
¡Hola, amigos y amigas de México! 🇲🇽
Justo ahora hay un furor total por México aquí en Japón, ¡y hasta las tiendas de conveniencia tienen una feria mexicana! ✨
Hoy compré un "pollo con salsa en tortilla" y una ensalada tipo guacamole hecha con "hiyoko-mame", que son unos garbanzos tradicionales de Japón.
Tal vez sea un poco diferente al auténtico sabor de México, ¡pero estoy disfrutando mucho de este toque mexicano! 🇲🇽😋🇯🇵
A Japanese programmer looked at every existing programming language in 1993, decided none of them made him happy, and spent two years building his own the language he built became the foundation GitHub, Shopify, Airbnb, and Coinbase were all built on.
His name is Yukihiro Matsumoto.
Everyone in the programming world calls him Matz. He was born in 1965, studied information science at the University of Tsukuba, and graduated in 1990 with a head full of ideas about what programming languages could be and a quiet frustration with what they actually were.
He knew Perl. He did not like it. He said it had the smell of a toy language. He knew Python. He did not like it either, because he felt its object-oriented features were add-ons bolted onto a language that was not designed around them from the start. He wanted something that was genuinely, completely object-oriented, easy to use, and built for the person writing the code rather than the machine running it.
He looked for that language. He could not find it.
So on February 24, 1993, he opened a chat window with his colleague Keiju Ishitsuka and typed: "Let us decide the codename now."
They wanted to name it after a gemstone, inspired by Perl. Ishitsuka suggested Coral. Matsumoto suggested Ruby. Ruby was shorter by one letter. Ruby won.
He spent the next two years building it alone, working through the architecture piece by piece. The object system. The string class. The IO streams. He later said he talked through specific features while speaking to his baby daughter, using her as a sounding board the way programmers use rubber ducks. In August 1993, he finally wrote the line of code that produced "Hello, world." on the screen.
The first public version, Ruby 0.95, was released to Japanese domestic newsgroups on December 21, 1995. No press release. No launch event. Just a quiet post to a mailing list.
The design principle underneath everything was the one nobody else had ever made primary. Matsumoto called it programmer happiness. He believed programming languages should be built for the joy and productivity of the person writing the code, not optimized purely for machine efficiency. Every decision in Ruby's design ran through that filter. If it made the programmer's life harder, it was wrong.
That philosophy attracted a small but devoted following in Japan through the late 1990s. Then in 2003, a Danish programmer named David Heinemeier Hansson discovered Ruby and used it to build an internal project management tool for his company. He called the tool Basecamp. He extracted the framework underneath it and released it publicly in 2004.
He called it Ruby on Rails.
Within a year of that release, the framework had changed how web applications were built. Rails introduced the principle of convention over configuration, meaning developers could make decisions about structure quickly because the framework had already made sensible defaults. What used to take weeks of setup took days. What used to take days took hours.
Shopify started on Rails in 2005. GitHub built on Rails a couple of years later. Airbnb, Twitch, Coinbase, SoundCloud, and Zendesk all followed. The first generation of consumer internet companies that defined how people think about software products were largely built by small teams moving fast on a framework that traced directly back to one Japanese programmer who was dissatisfied with his tools in 1993.
Shopify now processes over $200 billion in annual commerce volume. It still runs on Rails. GitHub became the largest code hosting platform on earth and was acquired by Microsoft for $7.5 billion in 2018. It started on Rails.
Matsumoto has said many times that he created Ruby for selfish reasons. He was so underwhelmed by every available option that he built something that would make himself happy. The programmer happiness he was chasing was his own.
The community that grew around Ruby adopted a motto that says everything about who he is. Matz is nice and so we are nice. They abbreviated it MINASWAN. It spread because it was true. He answered emails from strangers. He engaged with the community with patience. He treated the language as a gift, not a product.
He is still the chief designer of Ruby today. The language is 31 years old. It is still being improved.
The last stable release was Ruby 4.0.4, shipped on May 11, 2026.
One programmer, unhappy with his tools, built something better in the evenings in 1993. The companies you use to buy things, to store code, to book travel, and to watch streams were built on top of what he made.
He just wanted to be happy while he worked.
Did you know Ruby was behind the tools you use every day?
When you eat Mexican food, your brain releases endorphins and dopamine. Capsaicin, the compound in chili peppers, binds to pain receptors in your mouth. Your brain reads this as a threat and counters with feel-good chemicals. The burn in a good salsa triggers the same pathway as a runner's high.
This is all happening on top of a food tradition more than 3,000 years in the making. The tortilla in a chicharron taco exists because of nixtamalization, a process Mesoamerican cooks developed roughly 3,200 years ago. Corn kernels are soaked in lime water, which releases niacin, a B vitamin that corn otherwise locks away in an indigestible form. Without this step, corn-heavy diets cause pellagra, a B-vitamin deficiency that killed around 7,000 Americans per year at its peak in the early 20th century. Southern sharecroppers were eating corn without the process Mexico had preserved for three millennia.
In 2010, the UN added Mexican cuisine to its Intangible Cultural Heritage list, the first year any national food culture had ever qualified. The application covered seed preservation, farming customs, ritual preparation, and thousands of years of cooking knowledge passed through communities.
The diversity inside that designation is hard to picture. Mexico has 59 varieties of heirloom corn, more than 60 distinct chili pepper types, and 32 states with cuisines different enough that Oaxacan mole negro (a dark sauce from dried chili and chocolate) and Yucatecan cochinita pibil (slow-roasted pork in a smoky red spice paste) share almost no ingredients. Oaxaca alone has more than 20 types of mole. Mole poblano uses more than 20 ingredients, including several chili varieties, dark chocolate, and cinnamon, in a single sauce.
Chicharron fires three systems at once. Fat carries flavor deep into the palate. The crunch comes from pork skin dried, then dropped in 375-degree oil. The trapped moisture turns to steam, puffs the skin, and produces thousands of flavor compounds through the same browning chemistry that makes coffee and seared meat smell incredible. Then the salsa lands capsaicin on top of everything and the dopamine kicks in.
The "best food ever" reaction has a chemical basis. You are tasting dopamine from capsaicin, browning chemistry from pork fat at high heat, and a tortilla built on a process 3,200 years old. These flavors were engineered to do exactly this.
وداعاً المكسيك 💚
وداعاً للشعب الطيب 💚
لم نتجول في المكسيك حتى الان إنما كانت زيارة سريعة تعرفنا فيها على جمال روح هذا الشعب
ولنا عودة قريبة خلال المونديال بإذن الله 😍🇸🇦🇲🇽
A welder took a $28 an hour job in 2015 at a company he had never heard of.
On Friday, Juan Hernandez became a millionaire.
He spent ten years building the structures that lifted rockets onto the launch pad. SpaceX paid him partly in stock, the way it paid its cooks, machinists, technicians and cafeteria staff, equity instead of bigger salaries. His $10,000 grant grew into $880,000 at the IPO price. The first day pop carried it past a million. He is 42, an immigrant from Mexico, married, three kids. He says he is keeping the job.
He is not the outlier. He is the pattern.
4,400 current and former SpaceX employees became millionaires on Friday. One in five people who ever badged into the company. About 400 of them are walking away with $100 million or more. One employee took every cash bonus in stock instead of money. He is sitting on 50,000 shares, worth more than $8 million at Friday's prices.
And then there is the other side of the cafeteria.
Some employees sold their shares years ago, certain the company would never go public because Musk said he hated public markets. A few traded their stock for restaurant gift cards. The New York Times says they are consumed by regret. Same grant, same building, same years. One group held the claim. The other ate it.
None of the winners can touch the money yet. The first selling window opens after the August earnings report, and the rest unlocks in waves through December.
Underneath all of it sits the only lesson the market ever teaches. The welder and the gift card came from the same place. The difference was never the work. It was the ownership. Salary pays for the month. Equity pays for the era.
A cook in Brownsville just answered the question every buyer of SPCX is asking at $170: what is a claim on this company actually worth?
The piece prices that exact question at $2.2 trillion.
اللاعب المكسيكي اللي سجل النهاردة اول هدف في كاس العالم و كسب جائزه رجل المباراة ده قصته غريبه جدا !
اللاعب ده اسمه " خوليان كينيونيس "
تخيل كدة معايا ان خوليان في الاساس مواطن كولومبي و اتولد في بلده في جنوب كولومبيا اسمها " ماجاي بايان "
البلده دي كانت فقيره جدا لدرجة ان خوليان مكنش لاقي حذاء يلعب بيه كورة في الشارع ف كان بيلعب حافي !
خوليان فضل يلعب حافي لحد ما اكتشفوا كشاف مواهب اسمه " خورخي لويس بينتو "
ونقله الي اكاديميه اسمها فوتسيل اللي خوليان اتعلم فيها ان الموهبه بدون انضباط = اهدار وقت !
خوليان بعدها اخد قرار شجاع جدا و انتقل الي المكسيك لوحده و هو لسة 17 سنة و انضم الي فريق تيجيريس اونال
كان بيحكي انه كان خايف يعيش لوحده في البلد دي لكن حافز اطعام عائلته الفقيره هو اللي خلاه يكمل عشان بعدها يطلب الجنسيه المكسيكيه
و السبب قالوا في العبارات دي " المكسيك اعطتني كل شئ ، اعطتني عائله و مستقبلا و اسما ، اردت رد الجميل لهذا الشعب "
عشان كينيونيس يوفي بوعده ويسجل اول هدف في مسيرته و اول هدف للمكسيك في كاس العالم و فاز بجائزه افضل لاعب في مباراة الافتتاح
رد الجميل كما يجب ان يكون
Peter Alfred " Potta "
USA. A Mexican restaurant. We had not yet ordered anything, and the food was already arriving.
Chips. Salsa. Unrequested. Free.
I stopped the waiter. "We have not earned these."
"They just come with the table, man."
They come with the TABLE. In my land, hospitality is a debt. Every gift creates an obligation, weighed carefully, returned in the proper season with interest of feeling. Here, the gift arrives before you have even proven you can pay for dinner.
This is not an appetizer. This is a declaration: we trust you. Eat.
I ate with the gravity the moment deserved. And then — I must report this calmly — the basket emptied, and a new one appeared.
"Did we…?"
"Refill," the waiter said. "It's bottomless."
Bottomless. They have wells of salsa. The supply lines of this nation are beyond anything my ancestors imagined.
My friend warned me. "Don't fill up on chips, dude."
Too late. I had accepted three baskets. Honor demanded each one be finished — an unfinished gift is an insult. By the time my actual food arrived, I was a ruined man.
I was not hungry. I was not comfortable. I had been defeated by a courtesy.
Generosity that arrives before the request cannot be repaid. It can only be survived.
I know the rule now. I have made my peace with the basket. One basket. Two at the most.
Who am I deceiving. There is no number of baskets I would refuse. The trust of a nation is in that salsa, and I intend to honor all of it.
German words for the things you feel on a Friday. 🇩🇪
𝗱𝗶𝗲 𝗘𝗿𝗹𝗲𝗶𝗰𝗵𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘂𝗻𝗴 ➖ relief
The specific lightness of something heavy being over.
𝗱𝗶𝗲 𝗩𝗼𝗿𝗳𝗿𝗲𝘂𝗱𝗲 ➖ anticipation / pre-joy
The happiness that exists before the weekend arrives.
𝗱𝗶𝗲 𝗘𝗿𝘀𝗰𝗵ö𝗽𝗳𝘂𝗻𝗴 ➖ exhaustion
Not just tired. Properly emptied.
𝗱𝗮𝘀 𝗙𝗲𝗶𝗲𝗿𝗮𝗯𝗲𝗻𝗱𝗴𝗲𝗳ü𝗵𝗹 ➖ the Feierabend feeling
The specific sensation of work being done and the evening belonging to you.
𝗱𝗶𝗲 𝗭𝘂𝗳𝗿𝗶𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻𝗵𝗲𝗶𝘁 ➖ contentment / satisfaction
Not excitement. Something quieter.
The feeling of a week done well.
𝗱𝗶𝗲 𝗗𝗮𝗻𝗸𝗯𝗮𝗿𝗸𝗲𝗶𝘁 ➖ gratitude
What stays when everything else settles.
Which one is yours today? 👇
𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗻 𝗚𝗲𝗿𝗺𝗮𝗻 𝗦𝗶𝗺𝗽𝗹𝘆 🇩🇪
Stopped by the Porsche museum in Stuttgart today, another longtime “bucket list” of mine.
Long before I was following Tesla, I was very much involved in the Porsche story, owning several cars and even opening up a repair & restoration shop called”Joes Last Chance Porsche Garage”
Like Tesla now with EVs, FSD, AI & more. Porsche revolutionized sports cars by emphasizing engineering, putting in “lightness” into the designs to be as efficient as possible & their first car was actually an electric car with wheel hub motors!
This is a great stop if you are traveling to Germany!
2022 في كاس العالم بـ قطر صورت هذا الفيديو الذي يجمع الشعب السعودي و الشعب المكسيكي بعد خسارة السعودية من المكسيك وخروج المنتخبين رسمياً من البطولة
الشعبين يتقاطعون في الود و المرح وحب الحياة والتناغم بين الشعبين غير طبيعي 🇲🇽💚🇸🇦
German words that look like English and will embarrass you if you assume. 🇩🇪
𝗱𝗮𝘀 𝗚𝗶𝗳𝘁
Looks like: gift 🎁
Means: poison ☠️
𝗯𝗮𝗹𝗱
Looks like: bald 👴
Means: soon 🔜
𝗳𝗮𝘀𝘁
Looks like: fast ⚡
Means: almost 🤏
𝗱𝗲𝗿 𝗞𝗶𝘁𝘁
Looks like: kit 📦
Means: putty / filler 🛠️
𝗮𝗸𝘁𝘂𝗲𝗹𝗹
Looks like: actual ✅
Means: current / up to date 📰
𝘀𝗲𝗻𝘀𝗶𝗯𝗲𝗹
Looks like: sensible 🧠
Means: sensitive 🥺
𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗻𝘁𝘂𝗲𝗹𝗹
Looks like: eventually ⏳
Means: possibly / perhaps 🤔
𝗱𝗶𝗲 𝗞𝗼𝗻𝗸𝘂𝗿𝗿𝗲𝗻𝘇
Looks like: concurrence/concrete 🏗️
Means: competition 🏆
𝗱𝗮𝘀 𝗛𝗮𝗻𝗱𝘆
Looks like: handy 👍
Means: mobile phone 📱
𝗯𝗲𝗸𝗼𝗺𝗺𝗲𝗻
Looks like: become 📈
Means: to receive / to get 📩
The most dangerous words in a language are the ones that look familiar.
𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗻 𝗚𝗲𝗿𝗺𝗮𝗻 𝗦𝗶𝗺𝗽𝗹𝘆 🇩🇪
El nombre de Coyoacán proviene del náhuatl Coyohuacan, que significa "lugar de coyotes", reflejando la presencia de estos animales en la zona. Ya no hay coyotes en Coyoacán, pero hay una fuente con dos en el centro de la plaza que recuerda que alguna vez los hubo. La Villa de Coyoacán es una de las poblaciones más antiguas del valle de México, fundada alrededor del siglo VII por indígenas nahuas colhuas que crearon un altépetl que controlaba la zona sur poniente del lago de Texcoco. Existía siglos antes de que los mexicas fundaran Tenochtitlan. El escritor Salvador Novo, que vivió ahí, lo resumió mejor que nadie: la historia de Coyoacán comienza cuando acaba la de Tenochtitlan. Tras la conquista y caída de Tenochtitlan, la ciudad tuvo que ser abandonada por las condiciones deplorables en las que se encontraba debido a la batalla, por lo que los españoles fueron a Coyoacán. Fue lugar de los primeros asentamientos de los conquistadores mientras se limpiaban los escombros de Tenochtitlan, y se celebró un gran festín del que Bernal Díaz del Castillo narra: "mandó hacer un banquete en Coyoacán por alegrías de haberla ganado, para ello tenía ya mucho vino de un navío que había venido de Castilla". En Coyoacán, Hernán Cortés fundó el primer ayuntamiento del Valle de México y ahí dictó las primeras disposiciones para el reparto de las tierras que se formarían en torno a la Plaza Mayor de la nueva ciudad colonial. Fue la primera capital de la Nueva España antes de que la capital se trasladara a la reconstruida Tenochtitlan. Coyoacán ha sido residencia de mexicanos sobresalientes en el ámbito cultural: los poetas José Juan Tablada y Salvador Novo, los pintores Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, José Chávez Morado y Rufino Tamayo. En el mismo barrio donde Cortés celebró la conquista con vino de Castilla, León Trotsky vivió su exilio hasta que Stalin mandó a alguien a matarlo con un pico de hielo en 1940. La Casa Azul donde nació y murió Frida Kahlo está a tres cuadras de donde Trotsky escribía sus memorias sabiendo que lo buscaban. Diego Rivera vivía en el mismo barrio. La concentración de historia, arte y drama político por kilómetro cuadrado en Coyoacán no tiene paralelo en ningún otro barrio de México.
Juárez García no era hombre de términos medios, desde que se encumbró con la presidencia aplicó una política de todo o nada. Eso le ayudó, entre otras cosas, a que no se lo echaran. Aunque sus críticos siempre le han reprochado esa necedad con que se conducía en el puesto de presidente.
Algunos lo han acusado de traidor a su patria. Hizo cosas para ganarse ese titulo, pero hay algo muy importante que resaltar: él lo sabía, nunca ignoró que por sus acciones podría llegar a ser recordado por sus compatriotas como un traidor. Tuvo el valor, pese a todo, de correr ese riesgo porque de alguna forma, si quería ayudar a su país.