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aGuS 🇲🇽

aGuS 🇲🇽

@Agust1ncito

Soy un error de la Matrix

México Katılım Eylül 2009
1.1K Takip Edilen469 Takipçiler
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Ben Pierron
Ben Pierron@Ben_escrito·
Anthropic publicó una formación completa de 2 HORAS sobre cómo construir agentes con Claude. Presentada por el ingeniero que construye Claude Code. Guárdala bien en tus marcadores 🔖 De la A a la Z: estructurar un agente que funcione sin supervisión. Darle acceso al terminal para ejecutar, leer y corregir. Gestionar su memoria mediante el sistema de archivos. Bloquear alucinaciones con Hooks. Ejecutar un agente sobre una gran codebase sin romperlo todo. Al final: usarás Claude como un profesional y monetizarás tus habilidades. Seas principiante o avanzado, todo está en un solo lugar, este curso lo cubre todo. Vale más que todos esos cursos de 500$ que casi compras.
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Javier Matuk
Javier Matuk@jmatuk·
Gemini ya cuenta con 900 millones de usuarios en 230 países, 500 millones más de los que tenía en 2025. @Google dice que su IA interactúa con personas en más de 70 idiomas, y está disponible en todo tipo de dispositivos, incluidos los de Apple. ¿Cuál es la IA que más usas?
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Un poco de Tendencias
Un poco de Tendencias@UnPocoTende·
"Programador" Por la reacción que tuvo este "informático" cuando una chica lo encaró en la calle y al que bancamos todos.
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All Fútbol MX 🇲🇽
All Fútbol MX 🇲🇽@AllFutbolMX·
🚨👕 BREAKING: Adidas has unveiled a limited-edition Mexico third jersey in collaboration with Someone Somewhere. Hand-stitched by 300 local artisans who added their own special and unique touch. ❤️✍🏼
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Google
Google@Google·
Save this tip before your next big trip abroad ⬇️ With Google Translate’s Live translate feature, you can get instant translations for 70+ languages via any pair of headphones. 🎧 Just put on your headphones, open the Translate app and tap “Live translate.” You’ll then get real-time translations in your preferred language directly in your ear. Gemini’s advanced speech models preserve the speaker’s tone, emphasis and cadence so you get what they're saying, subtleties and all.
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Dipanshu Kushwaha
Dipanshu Kushwaha@Dipanshu_AI·
🚨 Anthropic just launched its first official AI certification And it's FREE ! Here's everything you need to know 👇 📌 What it is: The Claude Certified Architect, Foundations (CCA) launched on March 12, 2026 It's a proctored, 60-question exam testing real production architecture decisions 📌 What it covers: 1. Agentic Architecture & Orchestration → 27% 2. Tool Design & MCP Integration → 18% 3. Claude Code Configuration & Workflows → 20% 4. Prompt Engineering & Structured Output → 20% 5. Context Management & Reliability → 15% The biggest chunk is agentic architecture That tells you exactly where the industry is heading 📌 How to access it : Prep courses → Free for everyone on Anthropic Academy Exam → Free via the Claude Partner Network (any org can join) 🔗 Register : anthropic.skilljar.com/claude-certifi… 🔗 Prep courses : anthropic.skilljar.com Want more guides and updates like these ?
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Ancient History Hub
Ancient History Hub@AncientHistorry·
205 years ago today, Napoleon Bonaparte died on a tiny British prison island in the middle of the South Atlantic. He was 51. He had ruled most of Europe. And he changed the world so thoroughly that you are still living inside the systems he built. Start with the obvious one. The Napoleonic Code. He commissioned it in 1800, sat in on the drafting sessions personally, argued with the lawyers, and pushed it through in four years. Equality before the law. Property rights. Religious freedom. The end of feudal privilege. It is still the basis of civil law in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Portugal, most of Latin America, Quebec, Louisiana, and chunks of the Middle East and Africa. About a third of the planet writes contracts using rules a Corsican artillery officer wrote between battles. He sold Louisiana to Thomas Jefferson in 1803 for 15 million dollars. Roughly four cents an acre. It doubled the size of the United States overnight. Without that deal there is no St. Louis, no New Orleans as an American city, no Lewis and Clark, no Manifest Destiny. The American century starts with Napoleon needing cash for a war. He invaded Egypt in 1798 with an army and, weirdly, 167 scientists, mathematicians, and artists. They found the Rosetta Stone. That single slab is the reason we can read hieroglyphs at all. Egyptology as a field exists because Napoleon brought scholars to a war. He built the Bank of France, which still runs French monetary policy. He created the lycée system that still educates French teenagers. He shoved the metric system across Europe at sword-point until it stuck. He emancipated the Jews of every territory he conquered, tearing down ghetto walls in Rome, Venice, Frankfurt. He abolished serfdom in Poland. He standardized road networks, civil registries, and tax codes that European governments still operate from. And then there's the soldiering. He fought around 60 major battles and won most of them. Austerlitz, in 1805, against the combined Russian and Austrian empires, is still taught at West Point as one of the closest things to a tactically perfect battle ever fought. He was outnumbered, baited the enemy onto ground he had pre-selected, and broke them in a single afternoon. Three emperors took the field that morning. Only one walked off it on his own terms. He slept four hours a night. He read constantly, dictated letters to four secretaries at the same time, and personally signed off on everything from cavalry boot specs to the seating chart at the Comédie-Française. Wellington, the man who finally beat him at Waterloo, was asked decades later who the greatest general in history was. He answered without hesitating. "In this age, in past ages, in any age, Napoleon." He lost, in the end, because he could not stop. Russia in 1812 swallowed his army whole. Six hundred thousand men marched in. Maybe a tenth came back. He abdicated in 1814, escaped from Elba, ruled France again for 100 days, and lost it all for good in a wheat field in Belgium in June 1815. The British shipped him to St. Helena, a volcanic dot 1,200 miles off the African coast, and waited. He spent six years there dictating his memoirs, gardening, complaining about the dampness, and quietly rewriting his own legend so effectively that Europe spent the next century arguing about him. He died on May 5, 1821, during a storm so violent it ripped up the willow tree he liked to read under. His last words trailed off into fever. France. The army. Joséphine. Nineteen years later France brought him home. Two million people stood in the snow to watch the coffin go by. He was a tyrant. He was a reformer. He started wars that killed somewhere between three and six million people. He also wrote the rulebook that a third of humanity still lives under. Most people who try to conquer the world are forgotten inside a generation. Napoleon has been dead for 205 years and we are still arguing about him because we are still using his furniture.
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Darwin to Jesus
Darwin to Jesus@darwintojesus·
Real scientists believe in God
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aGuS 🇲🇽
aGuS 🇲🇽@Agust1ncito·
@SputnikMundo Si realizan un reportaje sobre oficios en México, sabrían que cada vez es más difícil encontrar aprendices de albañilería, mecánica automotriz, chóferes de transporte pesado, etc. Los actuales son personas mayores por escasez de talento joven.
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Sputnik Mundo
Sputnik Mundo@SputnikMundo·
🇲🇽🏗 Construcción en México recorta más de 200.000 puestos de trabajo 📉 Este sector perdió más de 200.000 empleos entre 2024 y 2025, de acuerdo con datos del Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía (Inegi) de México. 👷 Según la dependencia, en el segundo trimestre del 2024 se reportaban más de 4,9 millones de trabajadores en este ámbito y, para el cierre de 202,5 la cifra bajó a 4,7 millones. 💰 Para instituciones como BBVA, este hecho ocurre principalmente por un descenso en los proyectos de construcción de obra civil, cuyo valor pasó de 291.000 millones de pesos (16.166 millones de dólares) a 201.000 millones de pesos (11.166 millones de dólares) en el año pasado.
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Javier Matuk
Javier Matuk@jmatuk·
Según estudio de Ipsos, México ocupa el 1° lugar a nivel mundial en interés de las personas para comprar un coche eléctrico, esto a pesar de que no hay una red de carga pública robusta ni que subsidios importantes del gobierno. ¿Tú comprarías un coche eléctrico? ¿Cuál?
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aGuS 🇲🇽
aGuS 🇲🇽@Agust1ncito·
@jmatuk Ya lo hacía, al menos en Google docs, ya son varias veces que pedí me genere planeaciones y otros documentos.
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Javier Matuk
Javier Matuk@jmatuk·
Desde hoy Gemini ya puede crear PDFs, archivos de Word, Excel, Docs, Sheets y más archivos con sólo pedirlo. Ya no tendrás que copiar y pegar entre Gemini y un documento. Incluso puedes pasarle fotos de tus apuntes a mano y los puede convertir en un archivo.
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El Club del Arte 🎨📷📚🖼🕍🎼
Affogato, servido a través de una ventana en Gelateria Vivoli en Florencia. Grabado en una visita a Italia, uno de los lugares más hermosos del mundo! Nadie debería de perderse esto!
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Visit London
Visit London@visitlondon·
One of the most unique walks you can do in London ✨ The Diana Princess of Wales Memorial Walk is a 7-mile route marked by 90 plaques, guiding you past some of the most meaningful places from her life. Along the way, you’ll pass through four Royal Parks—St James’s Park, Green Park, Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens—plus iconic palaces and historic buildings tied to her story. Peaceful, scenic, and full of history… one of the most special walks to do in London 💫 #LondonMakesitPossible #VisitLondon #londonwalks #royalparks
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Xavier Demelo
Xavier Demelo@xavidemelo·
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aGuS 🇲🇽@Agust1ncito·
@jmatuk @CRTGobMX Todos nos quedáramos sin línea unos días para quitarnos la adicción. Ya solo usaríamos los momentos que tenemos wifi. 🤭
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redpillbot
redpillbot@redpillb0t·
One of the greatest lectures ever.
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Alok Pathak
Alok Pathak@1005Alok85200·
Learn AI for free directly from top companies. 1 - Anthropic: anthropic.skilljar.com 2 - Google: grow.google/ai 3 - Meta: ai.meta.com/resources/ 4 - NVIDIA: developer.nvidia.com/cuda 5 - Microsoft: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/training/ 6 - OpenAI: academy.openai.com 7 - IBM: skillsbuild.org 8 - AWS: skillbuilder.aws 9 - DeepLearning.AI: deeplearning.ai 10 - Hugging Face: huggingface.co/learn 👇Follow @1005Alok85200 and Comment "AI" for more free resources. Repost so others can benefit. Bookmark for later.
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aGuS 🇲🇽
aGuS 🇲🇽@Agust1ncito·
@oscarmartin ¿Se pueden descargar como PPTX y editar, o no te refieres a eso?
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OscarMartin
OscarMartin@oscarmartin·
¿Sabías que las presentaciones que genera NotebookLM no se pueden editar? El truco: pasas el PDF a Canva con Grab Text + Magic Layer y las conviertes en 100% editables (texto, capas, colores, todo). NotebookLM genera → Canva te deja personalizar como quieras. Te lo enseño en este video 👇
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Jaynit
Jaynit@jaynitx·
In the 1920s, a Stanford psychologist tracked genius children for 50 years. Malcolm Gladwell breaks down what he discovered: Rich families → successful. Poor families → failures. Not average. Failures. Genius-level IQs that produced nothing. He spent 60 minutes at Microsoft explaining why we're wrong about success: The psychologist was named Terman. He gave IQ tests to 250,000 California schoolchildren. He identified the top 0.1%. Kids with IQs of 140 and above. His hypothesis: these children would become the leaders of academia, industry, and politics. He tracked them. And tracked them. For decades. The results split into three groups. The top 15% achieved real prominence. The middle group had average, moderately successful professional lives. And the bottom group? By any measure, failures. The difference wasn't personality. Wasn't habits. Wasn't work ethic. It was simple: the successful geniuses came from wealthy households. The failures came from poor families. Poverty is such a powerful constraint that it can reduce a one-in-a-billion brain to a lifetime of worse than mediocrity. There's a concept called "capitalization rate." It asks a simple question: what percentage of people who are capable of doing something actually end up doing that thing? In inner city Memphis, only 1 in 6 kids with athletic scholarships actually go to college. If our capitalization rate for sports in the inner city is 16%, imagine how low it must be for everything else. Here's something stranger. Gladwell read the birth dates of the 2007 Czech Junior Hockey Team: January 3rd. January 3rd. January 12th. February 8th. February 10th. February 17th. February 20th. February 24th. March 5th. March 10th. March 26th... 11 of the 20 players were born in January, February, or March. This isn't unique to the Czechs. Every elite hockey team in the world shows the same pattern. Every elite soccer team too. Why? The eligibility cutoff for youth leagues is January 1st. When you're 10 years old, a kid born in January has 10 months of maturity on a kid born in October. That's 3 or 4 inches of height. The difference between clumsy and coordinated. So we look at a group of 10 year olds, pick the "best" ones, give them special coaching, extra practice, more games. We think we're identifying talent. We're just identifying the oldest. Then we give the oldest more opportunities, and 10 years later they really are the best. Self-fulfilling prophecy. The capitalization rate for hockey talent born in the second half of the year? Close to zero. We're leaving half of all potential hockey players on the table because of an arbitrary date on a calendar. Kids born in the youngest cohort of their school class are 11% less likely to go to college. 11% of human potential squandered because we organize elementary school without reference to biological maturity. Now here's the part about math. Asian kids dramatically outperform Western kids in mathematics. The gap is enormous and consistent across decades of testing. Some people say it's genetic. It's not. It's attitudinal. When Asian kids face a math problem, they believe effort will solve it. When Western kids face a math problem, they believe the answer depends on innate ability they either have or don't. Here's the proof. The international math tests include a 120-question survey. It asks about study habits, parental support, attitudes. It's so long most kids don't finish it. A researcher named Erling Boe decided to rank countries by what percentage of survey questions their kids completed. Then he compared it to the ranking of countries by math performance. The correlation was 0.98. In the history of social science, there has never been a correlation that high. If you want to know how good a country is at math, you don't need to ask any math questions. Just make kids sit down and focus on a task for an extended period of time. If they can do it, they're good at math. Why do Asian cultures have this attitude? Gladwell's theory: rice farming. His European ancestors in medieval England worked about 1,000 hours a year. Dawn to noon, five days a week. Winters off. Lots of holidays. A peasant in South China or Japan in the same period worked 3,000 hours a year. Rice farming isn't just harder than wheat farming. It's a completely different relationship with work. There's a Chinese proverb: "A man who works dawn to dusk 360 days a year will not go hungry." His English ancestors would have said: "A man who works 175 days a year, dawn to 11, may or may not be hungry." If your culture does that for a thousand years, it becomes part of your makeup. When your kids sit down to face a calculus problem, that legacy of persistence translates perfectly. Now consider distance running. In Kenya, there are roughly a million schoolboys between 10 and 17 running 10 to 12 miles a day. In the United States, that number is probably 5,000. Our capitalization rate for distance running is less than 1%. Kenya's is probably 95%. The difference isn't genetic. The difference is what the culture values and where it spends its attention. Here's the most fascinating finding. 30% of American entrepreneurs have been diagnosed with a profound learning disability. Richard Branson is dyslexic. Charles Schwab is dyslexic. John Chambers can barely read his own email. This isn't coincidence. Their entrepreneurialism is a direct function of their disability. How do you succeed if you can't read or write from early childhood? You learn to delegate. You become a great oral communicator. You become a problem solver because your entire life is one big problem. You learn to lead. 80% of dyslexic entrepreneurs were captain of a high school sports team. Versus 30% of non-dyslexic entrepreneurs. By the time they enter the real world, they've spent their whole life practicing the four skills at the core of entrepreneurial success: delegation, oral communication, problem solving, and leadership. Ask them what role dyslexia played in their success and they don't say it was an obstacle. They say it's the reason they succeeded. A disadvantage that became an advantage. Here's what Gladwell wants you to understand: When we see differences in success, our default explanation is differences in ability. We forget how much poverty, stupidity, and attitude constrain what people can become. We refuse to admit that our own arbitrary rules are leaving talent on the table. We cling to naive beliefs that our meritocracies are fair. The capitalization argument is liberating. It says you don't look at a struggling group and conclude they're incapable. It says problems that look genetic or innate are often just failures of exploitation. It says we can make a profound difference in how well people turn out. If we choose to pay attention. This 60 minute Microsoft talk will teach you more about success than every self-help book you've ever read combined. Bookmark this & give it an hour today, no matter what.
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