@PeatonDelSur Es mas peligroso para ti, y sobre todo para los demas que no van contigo, somos una sociedad porque nos conviene estar juntos para estar mejor, comportemonos como tal, respetemos los limites de velocidad, entre mas rapido vas, mas facil te matas. https://t.co/gA6w5vTGYA 4/?
Vibe coders are getting sued.
People are launching apps with real users but skipping the boring stuff that can actually kill the product.
A developer with 20+ years of experience just shared the pre-launch checklist every AI builder should run:
→ privacy policy if you collect user data
→ know where user data is stored
→ check security headers
→ scan against OWASP basics
→ look for SQL injection / XSS / auth issues
→ make sure .env values are not leaking
→ check API responses for sensitive data
→ remove secrets from logs
→ never expose API keys in frontend code
→ move keys server-side or behind a proxy
→ add rate limits before someone burns your API bill
This is what most vibe coders are missing.
AI can help you build the app.
But if you launch without security, privacy, and abuse checks...
you didn't ship a product.
you shipped a liability.
A lot of foreigners come to Japan for sushi, ramen, and wagyu.
Then somehow they leave talking about the convenience store egg sandwich.
I know it sounds stupid.
It’s just bread, egg, and mayo.
But if you’ve had one in Japan, you get it.
The bread is soft.
The egg is creamy.
There’s no crust.
The mayo is mild.
And somehow the whole thing just works.
In many countries, a gas station or convenience store sandwich is something you buy when you have no other choice.
You eat it because you’re hungry, not because you expect it to be good.
But in Japan, people try a cheap egg sandwich from 7-Eleven, Lawson, or FamilyMart and go:
“Wait, why is this so good?”
That’s the funny part.
For Japanese people, it’s not special.
It’s just something you grab before work, at the station, or late at night when you’re too tired to think.
But for visitors, it feels weirdly impressive.
Not because Japan invented the egg sandwich.
It didn’t.
Japan just took a very normal food and made it soft, clean, cheap, and reliable.
And honestly, that might be one of the most Japanese things ever.
A city that makes cars obsolete and builds transport purely on fundamentals of walking, cycling and public transit are cities that are designed for future.
Paris is leading, and London, NYC, Beijing are catching up.
“Parisian car traffic fell by more than half between 2002 and 2023, while cycle lanes expanded sixfold. Bikes now make more than twice as many journeys as cars. Hidalgo, stepping down after 12 years, exulted: ‘The bike beat the car.’”
North America: 92% car trips
This kind of capture of movement does not come from a strong American preference for driving.
It’s the direct result of zoning, parking mandates, and sprawl.
americans really spend 4 years in a walkable community (college), say “wow, those were truly the best years of my life. oh well!” and then proceed to buy a house & car in the middle of a suburbanite hellscape
everyone wants a village, but no one wants to be a villager
> drive your friends to the airport
> go to their party even when you're tired
> stop cancelling last minute
> host at your place
> support the wins & losses
it's worth every ounce of effort
Driving through a city SHOULD be inconvenient if you're driving at the same time as everyone else.
The issue is geometry, not ideology. There's only so much space, and cars take up a ton of space.
Día 4 sin pedir disculpas.
La exabogada de El Chapo no se quedó contenta con la sanción en mi contra:
Ahora exige al @TEPJF_informa que sancione a 9 medios nacionales, locales e internacionales:
- PROCESO @proceso
- Milenio @Milenio
- El Financiero @ElFinanciero_Mx
- MSN @MSNMex
- Publimetro @PublimetroMX
- Sinaloa Hoy @sinaloahoy
- La Paradoja
- Binoticias
- Omnia
Mi equipo legal, encabezado por @LeonardoZuGa, tiene lista nuestra impugnación.
Necesitamos unir fuerzas para defender la libertad de expresión e impedir que nos prohíban hablar de los vínculos entre los políticos y el crimen organizado.
Invito a estos medios y sus abogados a que se apersonen en el juicio y defiendan su libertad y la de todos los mexicanos.
Mis DMs están abiertos para que entremos en contacto y demos esta lucha juntos.
I saw this clip maybe two years ago, and for whatever reason, it was just the exact right time for me to hear it. Especially the part about "motivation" being meaningless, "habits" are everything.
As someone with ADHD, it quite literally changed the trajectory of my life.
Seriously, WATCH this short video to see how to effectively make the case for protected bike-lanes, and particularly how they’re good for business. Or just as a great example of how to speak to any city council.
Watch it, then share it. HT @PVDStreets
Día 2 sin pedir disculpas.
Esta es la prueba directa de que Silvia Rocío Delgado, ahora jueza penal en Chihuahua, fue abogada de El Chapo.
En el amparo 513/2016, fue autorizada por el puño y letra de Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera.
A pesar de este vínculo claro con uno de los narcotraficantes más importantes de la historia de México, ninguna autoridad investigó la profundidad de su relación con El Chapo o con el Cártel de Sinaloa.
Haber representado a un narcotraficante no la hace mala persona ni mala abogada: simplemente representa un riesgo para la impartición de justicia.
Ahora, a ella le toca resolver delitos locales vinculados con el Cártel de Sinaloa y Los Chapitos, que podrían ser afectados por su relación profesional con su líder histórico.
Esto es lo único que he dicho sobre ella. Algo que cualquiera con sentido común podría compartir.
A pesar de eso, la Sala Regional de Guadalajara del @TEPJF_informa considera que es violencia política, que tengo que borrar mis publicaciones y pedir disculpas.
This is why protected cycle lanes matter.
One lane can move up to 7× more bikes than cars per hour.
Bikes take a fraction of the road space, freeing up the rest of the road.
Private car drivers, you’re welcome 😉 🚲
great neighborhoods have ground floor light manufacturing spaces, so welders and fabricators can work and live in the same neighborhood where their kids go to school, where their church is, where they bank, where they shop, etc.
Introducing a new, stupid website to find a piece of classical music whose duration most closely matches that of your next trip.
https://t.co/MtzwhFyy4U
Your prefrontal cortex has two modes. Planning mode and execution mode. You can’t run both simultaneously. And that explains why “not caring” actually works.
Overthinking is planning mode stuck in a loop. Your brain simulates a future scenario, finds a threat in that simulation, which triggers another simulation. Huberman calls this rumination cycling. Your default mode network fires continuously, burning glucose on fictional scenarios while you sit paralyzed.
The moment you stop treating a decision as consequential, you starve the loop. No perceived threat means no new simulation. Your prefrontal cortex drops into execution mode by default.
Anxiety runs the same circuit. Your amygdala flags uncertainty as danger. Your cortex models outcomes to resolve it. More models means more uncertainty means more amygdala activation. The loop compounds on itself.
People who seem fearless aren’t less intelligent. They have a higher threshold for what triggers the simulation loop. Their amygdala requires a bigger signal before it hijacks prefrontal resources.
You can train that threshold. Cold exposure, controlled breathing, voluntary discomfort. All of these teach your nervous system that activation doesn’t require a response. That’s Huberman’s entire stress inoculation framework.
This tweet accidentally described a real neuroscience protocol in the worst possible packaging.