Telecom engineer, Philosophy student, founder at @limenius, @ReactAlicante organizer. Coding is fun, building stuff double fun. Playing football makes you happy
Software just got cheaper. The software engineer’s hour has not. You can build more in less time. So cheer up and build.
My bet is that the industry is about to bloom, not decay. We will see. 🙂
Los gráficos de Jon González son uno de los mejores recursos sobre economía española en X.
Aunque están en el Notion, los he subido y ordenado por temática (salarios, impuestos, pensiones, vivienda, PIB, demografía...) en una galería con buscador.
👇
https://t.co/r9BtYW1maq
Así les gusta cerrar los debates, a algunos. Por eso les jode tanto que otros tengamos resuelto el sustento y por más que griten a nuestros empleadores con la arrobita y nos dediquen artículos infamantes nos riamos en su cara.
We have a bias towards thinking that human behavior can be codified by rules. It is a bias of the Modern Age. Newton’s physics, with its three rules, was so incredibly powerful that philosophers (Kant is a great example) tried to apply the model of “it’s codified by rules, let’s find the rules” to everything.
“If I can just write the perfect AGENTS.md everything will be fine forever.”
It is an old dream that all conflicts can be resolved before you face them by knowing some rules: if you knew the rule and you follow it, you will always take the right decision, so decision conflicts will be a thing of the past.
But this dream is a bias, a frame that permeates our thought in a way that is inescapable. There is no way to avoid decision conflicts, and no way to avoid “better judgement” calls that cannot be reduced to rules. Decision in place with the particular factors of a particular situation in all its details cannot be avoided.
If we formulate this in terms of context, the amount of context we manage is huge and we cannot even articulate it: an expert won’t be able in many cases to make explicit all the factors that led to a particular decision.
AI automates tasks, not jobs, and when a task gets cheaper, demand for the job grows.
AI cannot automate jobs end-to-end because it lacks autonomy and cannot operate without supervision. There is still zero job from 2022 that can be performed end-to-end by AI, not even translator or customer support associate.
Nick Cave perdió a su hijo de 15 años, Arthur, en 2015; y a su hijo Jethro, con 31 años, en 2022.
Hace poco respondió así a un fan que le preguntaba por qué seguir creyendo en el mundo, en vez de abismarse en el cinismo.
Stop repeating the narrative of the Islamic Republic in the West about this brave Iranian wrestling champion who was executed by hanging in Iran. Watch this video.
Saleh Mohammadi just wanted to be a champion.
He had no lawyer, no fair trial, no free media coverage, no access to his family, not even a chance to say goodbye. What did he have? A forced confession after torture.
To those saying “if you kill a police officer in America, they will shoot you” , you are helping the regime justify more executions. You are making their job easier in the West. Because this 19 year old wrestler He was not a criminal. His only crime was protesting and demanding freedom.
You are putting the lives of other protesters at risk by repeating their narrative.
Listen to his story. We have been in contact with his family. Many Iranian athletes and journalists have spoken to them. He was innocent.
#IranMassacre
Today, in Iran, in the middle of a war, the regime executed a 19-year-old national wrestling champion for the crime of joining January protests. 💔
After signaling to the world, including President @realDonaldTrump, that they would halt executions of protesters, the regime has done the exact opposite.
Three young protesters, Saleh Mohammadi, Mehdi Ghasemi, and Saeed Davoudi, were hanged in Qom after a sham trial.
Reports indicate torture. Forced confessions. No access to chosen lawyers. Closed-door proceedings. No right to appeal.
I call on @GlobalAthleteHQ to stand with Iranian athletes who are being silenced, imprisoned, and executed simply for raising their voices.
This is not just about sports. This is about human dignity.
Our families in Iran are being held hostage. We don’t even know if many of them are alive because the regime has cut the internet.
I call on every anti-war activist, every human rights defender, everyone who is following the situation with concern: demand that the international community help restore internet access to Iran.
People inside the country are sending desperate messages:
“Please help us reconnect to the world.”
Will you stand with the Iranian people so our voices are not buried in silence?
#DigitalBlackout
How dare you? Prime Minister @sanchezcastejon
How dare you use the bodies of thousands of murdered Iranians as political ammunition of your domestic battles?
Mr. Pedro Sánchez,
Our suffering is not your political theater.
You spoke more than 1,600 words about war and morality, yet barely a word about the real war the Islamic Republic has been waging against unarmed Iranians for decades.
More than 32,000 people have been killed by the Islamic Republic in Iran.
Women shot in the eyes.
Hospitals stormed to finish off the wounded.
I invite you to be brave.
Watch the videos of body bags piled on top of each other in the streets of Iran.
Listen to the doctors and nurses who describe how security forces stormed hospitals to finish off the wounded protesters.
Then look into my eyes.
I survived three assassination plots by the same regime you still treat as a diplomatic partner. The FBI warned me that their killers operate even here in the West.
Spain should understand this better than anyone.
Spain is a country that emerged from dictatorship and rebuilt democracy. For millions of Iranians, Spain could be a symbol of hope, a reminder that a nation can leave tyranny behind and build freedom.
You keep the Iranian embassy open.
You shake the hands of officials whose hands are stained with the blood of my people.
Yet you do not even dare to shake the hand of an Iranian woman who carries the scars of this regime’s war against us.
This is not about your political fights.
This is not about left or right.
This is about human freedom.
It is easy to make speeches about peace.
It is harder to confront a regime that has been waging war against its own people for 45 years.
History will remember who chose comfort over courage.
And who stood with the victims.
The Iranian people do not want war.
But we will never accept politicians shaking hands with the regime that declared war on us.
#Iran
In the spring of 1980, Farrokhroo Parsa — Iran’s Minister of Education before the Islamic Revolution — was executed. She had devoted her life to fighting for women’s rights and did not betray her principles even after the victory of the Islamic Revolution. In the verdict issued by the new authorities, she was found guilty of “spreading corruption on earth and denying Allah.”
“I would rather face death with open arms than live in disgrace, forcibly covered with a veil. I will not kneel before those who expect me to repent for half a century of my struggle for equality between men and women. I am not prepared to wear the chador and take a step backward in history,” Parsa wrote in her farewell letter to her children.
To those who call themselves anti-war in the West: Look at these two women.
They were unarmed. They protested the killing of Mahsa Jina Amini for not wearing appropriate hijab and the regime answered with bullets aimed at their eyes.
They wear the scars of a dictatorship that fears freedom.
So tell me:
Are you against war, or just against confronting the regime that wages it on its own people?
Maybe the regime that declares war on its own girls is the problem. So if you’re anti-war, try being anti-theocracy. I stand with these women, not with their oppressors. How about you?
I was eleven years old. My mother was taking me to an eye specialist when we were stopped by a patrol of the IRGC at this very spot. A few strands of my hair were visible, and I had grown too tall for my trousers. Again and again she pleaded with them not to take me, explaining that I was tall for my age, that she had just returned from the front lines and had not yet found the time to buy me new clothes. I was frightened, but my mother's fear was far greater than my own.
Many years have passed since that afternoon. Yet when I see this place of cruelty and its power holders reduced to dust, I am overcome with emotion and an unexpected, trembling relief. To witness a regime of terror crumbling into ruin feels like learning to walk after long paralysis, like unfurling wings and discovering flight, like water offered at last to one who has wandered for hours through the Sahara.
I feel a release, a memory long buried in the body beginning at last to loosen. In this moment, the child I once was seems to breathe again.
La gran maestra de ajedrez franco iraní Mitra Hejazipour: “Los iraníes no tienen nada que aprender de esta izquierda occidental que nunca ha arriesgado su vida frente a los mulás”.
En 2019, se quitó públicamente el hiyab durante un torneo en Moscú, fue expulsada de la selección nacional iraní y se instaló en Francia. Naturalizada francesa en 2023, ese mismo año se proclamó campeona de Francia de ajedrez.
https://t.co/nu0jDUlCY7
Tell me about the "Islamophobia".
Tell that to the 7-year-old me, who was forced to wear this (photo on the right) to school every day since she was 7 years old.
Tell the 8-year-old me that she was about to be molested by an adult man in a very conservative neighborhood on her way to school, and that if she didn't run fast enough and the school wasn't close enough, who knows what would happen to her.
Tell me my entire childhood wasn't taken away from me.
Tell me my adolescence in Iran was not filled with terror.
Tell me I wasn't oppressed and abused and that I'm just a "Islamophobe."
For 47 years, the people of Iran have yearned for justice, freedom, peace, and prosperity—and have paid for it with their blood.
If your outrage at Iranian lives lost began only today, but you were silent as the regime slaughtered thousands of its own people in recent weeks, Iranian lives did not suddenly become worthy of your concern. Their lives have always mattered.
Many Iranians today are experiencing a profound and painful dissonance: waiting with bated breath for the fall of their tormentors, while grieving every innocent life lost—and knowing it was decades of the regime’s violence, repression, and recklessness that led the country to this precipice.
Imagine the profound dissonance of living under such injustice for so long that war begins to feel like the lesser evil.
It pains me deeply that the Islamic Republic has led Iran to this moment. The Iranian people are not this regime. They are its first victims—and they have never stopped fighting to rid themselves of it.
I stand with the people of Iran and their right to self-determination. May freedom, justice and peace swiftly prevail.