Muy bueno este artículo de @OSammartino . Qué sentido tiene que la Constitución designe un proceso de designación de jueces que involucra al Consejo de la Magistratura, al Ejecutivo y al Senado si todo finalmente depende del capricho del presidente, revirtiendo lo que ya decidió.
¿Hacia un nuevo Marbury vs. Madison Argentino? Una interesante nota de @OSammartino en LN a propósito del caso de Verónica Michelli. Una valiosa reseña de uno de los precedentes más ilustres de la Suprema Corte de los EEUU.
https://t.co/aZIj7LW9c0
Un desastre @Aerolineas_AR ayer en Bahía Blanca. Vuelo cancelado por neblina. No garantizan vuelo al día siguiente y ofrecen reintegrar el dinero. El formulario online es un chino que rechaza datos cargados correctamente. Una trampa cazabobos para evitar reintegrar.
Vuelo 1623 cancelado por neblina. Aerolíneas Argentinas ofrece devolución online, pero su sistema rechaza un CBU válido de 22 dígitos alegando que “debe contener 22 números”. Lo ingresé manualmente varias veces. ¿Error o mecanismo para desalentar reclamos? @Aerolineas_AR
Mi hermano se mandó a hacer una versión pixel art de Buenos Aires y es la cosa más nerd urbanista que vas a ver en el año, yo que vos me armo un Campari y me mando a explorar en https://t.co/8OFIc0tG1C
Esta entrevista al jefe de economía de Anthropic es excelente y reveladora (cero hype). Presten atención a la diferencia entre “uso automático” de la IA y el “uso aumentado” (interactuar o “pelotear” con la IA para obtener mejores resultados), y cuales empleos peligran a futuro.
instead of watching 1 hour of Netflix tonight, watch this Anthropic's chief economist interview
it's the most honest explanation I've seen of what AI is actually doing to office work right now
real data from inside Anthropic on how Claude is changing the way people and companies work
useful whether you work in tech, finance, law or anything in between
everything you need to actually use Claude the right way is in the article below
Terence Tao: "We lived in a world with cognitive friction until very recently, where every task required us to use our brain.
So we didn't really think about it, we just thought this was the cost of doing something intellectual. But now we have AI and the other technologies that can bring these frictions down to zero."
Most research time is not spent having cinematic insights.
It is spent checking cases, chasing references, translating intuition into computation, testing a path, finding it false, and deciding whether the failure taught you anything.
AI changes the cost of that loop.
Terence Tao says that now he can try “crazier things,” and that makes so much difference. Because unconventional ideas are often not rejected by proof, but by inconvenience.
A mathematician may avoid a strange direction not because it is foolish, but because the bookkeeping, coding, or literature search needed to test it is too expensive for a hunch.
This is where cognitive friction becomes scientific friction.
Lowering it does not make taste, judgment, or proof disappear; it makes more weak signals cheap enough to inspect before they are abandoned.
AI is making hesitation less expensive, and that is often where discovery begins.
Creo que son muy valiosos los conceptos de la encíclica Magnifica Humanitas. No son creyente, pero creo que los conceptos y las ideas expresadas nos conciernen a todos,
@GustArballo Lo peor es que no explican, para nada, que es un “gemelo digital”. Es un concepto bien interesante y útil, según indagué después, pero inicialmente pensé que querían volver a clonar a Conan.
Never regret a day in your life. Good days give happiness, bad days give experiences, worst days give lessons, and best days give memories.
—Professor Richard Feynman
Never regret a day in your life. Good days give happiness, bad days give experiences, worst days give lessons, and best days give memories.
—Professor Richard Feynman
Yale Üniversitesi siyaset felsefesi üzerine giriş kursu yayınladı. Sokrates, Platon, Aristoteles, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau ve Tocqueville'in temel görüşlerini ele alıyor. Otomatik çevir seçeneği ile hedef dilde altyazılı izlenebilir.
https://t.co/sjYWK7uwhG
💥⚖️¡Estamos a un paso de cumplir un objetivo central: que el Poder Judicial Federal tenga un Código de Ética!
➡️Lo propusimos en campaña, lo trabajamos con la abogacía unida, lo instalamos en la agenda pública y lo defendimos con una convicción muy clara: sin ética exigible, no hay Justicia confiable.
✅ El proyecto hoy fué aprobado en comisión y pasará al próximo plenario para su aprobación final.
No se trata de una consigna. Se trata de fijar reglas claras para quienes tienen en sus manos decisiones que afectan derechos, libertades y patrimonio de las personas. La independencia judicial no es licencia para actuar sin límites. Es una garantía de los ciudadanos. Y por eso debe ir acompañada de integridad, transparencia y rendición de cuentas.
"Milei se volvió un pragmático": Andrés Malamud en entrevista con Carlos... https://t.co/8vRimLOLoU vía @YouTube/ Esta entrevista a @andresmalamud es imperdible y genial en muchos sentidos. Lo que señala sobre nuestra justicia es una alerta demoledora.
Winston Churchill fought his depression with bricks. He'd lay them for hours at his country home in Kent. He joined the bricklayers' union. And in 1921 he wrote about why it worked. It took psychology another 75 years to catch up.
He called his depression the "Black Dog." It followed him for decades. His method for fighting it back was as basic as it sounds: laying brick after brick, hour after hour.
Churchill spelled out his theory in a long essay for The Strand Magazine. People who think for a living, he wrote, can't fix a tired brain just by resting it. They have to use a different part of themselves. The part that moves the eyes and the hands. Woodworking, chemistry, bookbinding, bricklaying, painting. Anything that drags the body into a problem the mind can't solve by itself.
Modern psychology now calls this behavioral activation. It's one of the most-studied depression treatments out there. Depression sets a behavior trap. You feel bad, so you stop doing things, and doing less means less to feel good about. Feeling worse makes you do even less. The loop tightens until you can't breathe inside it.
Behavioral activation breaks the loop from the action side. You schedule the activity first, even when every part of you doesn't want to. Doing it produces small rewards: a wall gets straighter, a painting fills in, a messy room gets clean. Those small rewards slowly rewire the brain. Action comes first, and the feeling follows.
Researchers at the University of Washington put this to the test in 2006. They studied 241 adults with major depression and compared three treatments: behavioral activation, regular talk therapy, and antidepressants. For the people who were most severely depressed, behavioral activation matched the drugs. It beat the talk therapy. A 2014 review of more than 1,500 patients across 26 trials backed up the result.
Physical work like bricklaying does something extra on top of this. It crowds out rumination, the looping bad thoughts that grind people down during the worst stretches of depression. Bricklaying needs both hands and gives feedback brick by brick: each one is straight or crooked. After an hour you can see exactly how much wall you built. No room left for the mental chewing.
The line George Mack used in his post, "depression hates a moving target," is good poetry. The science behind it is sharper. Depression hates a brain that has somewhere else to be.