Dani Samaniego

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Dani Samaniego

Dani Samaniego

@danisama13

Yo no soy marinero, soy capitán

Camboriú Katılım Şubat 2010
553 Takip Edilen942 Takipçiler
DELPY 📱🎬
DELPY 📱🎬@delpynews·
▶️ IA EN GUARANÍ: PARAGUAYA SORPRENDE AL MUNDO | 🇵🇾✨ 📉 Samantha Adorno, estudiante de la Universidad de Kansas, marcó presencia en el CHI 2026, uno de los congresos tecnológicos más importantes del mundo. Presentó un modelo de Inteligencia Artificial diseñado específicamente para incluir al guaraní en el mapa digital global. 🗣️ La arquitectura no solo procesa texto, sino que está preparada para escuchar, interpretar y comprender el contexto cultural de lenguas de tradición oral. Según Adorno, el guaraní sigue poco representado en internet y su propuesta busca cambiar esa realidad respetando la soberanía de datos. 🌍Se espera que el desarrollo continúe en Paraguay, involucrando directamente a las comunidades locales para que ellas controlen su propia información lingüística. Fuente: IP Paraguay. ✅
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Cuarto Poder Py
Cuarto Poder Py@CuartoPoder_Py·
🔴 SE AGRADECE "EL APOYO INSTITUCIONAL": INJUSTO SUMARIO A AGENTES DEL GRUPO LINCE TRAS CAPTURAR A UN BARRABRAVA ◾La reciente decisión de la Policía Nacional de abrir un sumario contra los agentes del Grupo Lince, tras la detención del barrabrava azulgrana Luis Ernesto Servín Vera, resulta ser una medida profundamente cuestionable y desconectada del sentir popular. ◾Servín, un hombre con múltiples antecedentes penales y responsable de exhibir como trofeo un escudo policial durante los violentos disturbios del último superclásico, fue finalmente capturado gracias al firme accionar de estos uniformados en la ciudad de Luque. ◾Sin embargo, en lugar de reconocer y respaldar el esfuerzo de los agentes por sacar de las calles a un delincuente peligroso que contaba con orden de captura, las autoridades han decidido someterlos a una investigación tras la viralización de un video del procedimiento. ◾Esta medida administrativa envía un mensaje nefasto a las fuerzas del orden y parece priorizar las quejas sobre el trato a un inadaptado por encima del bienestar común. La ciudadanía vio con muy buenos ojos y aplaudió el actuar de los policías, entendiendo que se enfrentaban a un criminal que no dudó en burlarse de las instituciones y perturbar la paz pública. ◾ Castigar a quienes nos protegen, cuando actúan con la firmeza necesaria ante quienes siembran el caos, es un despropósito burocrático que solo debilita la seguridad ciudadana y frustra a una población que exige orden y justicia frente a la violencia en el fútbol.
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Dani Samaniego
Dani Samaniego@danisama13·
@AndradeBR__ Hay culturas que recuerdan matanzas de hasta hace dos mil años… como por ejemplo la matanza De los Santos inocentes que se recuerda hasta hoy día, esto por nombrar alguna. Además quedaron ocupando el país durante 7 años más luego de concluida la guerra
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Dani Samaniego
Dani Samaniego@danisama13·
@AndradeBR__ Como no se va a recordar una guerra donde murió el 70% de la población civil? Pocas veces en la historia ha ocurrido semejante bestialidad. Además sucedió hace 150 años, que en términos históricos no es nada de tiempo.
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JuanMa Talavera García
JuanMa Talavera García@juanma_talavera·
Qué manera de "afear" un patrimonio o de decir "me chupa un huevo" instalando este adefesio, que encima de que es luego horrible y de improvisada estructura, se destruyó parte de las balaustradas originales para instalarla @luisbello_asu @AsuncionMuni
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James Lucas
James Lucas@JamesLucasIT·
In 1499, Michelangelo overheard people crediting his greatest work to someone else. He snuck into St. Peter's at night and carved his name on the sculpture. He regretted it immediately and never signed anything again for the rest of his life... He was 24 years old. The year before, a French cardinal had paid him 450 gold ducats to sculpt a statue for his own tomb. The contract had one strange clause: it had to be "the most beautiful work of marble in Rome, one that no living artist could better." Michelangelo had never completed a major public commission. He accepted anyway... He carved for two years from a single block of Carrara marble that he later called the most perfect stone he ever worked. What he produced was the Pietà: the body of Christ, lifeless, across the lap of his mother. When it was unveiled, visitors refused to believe a 24-year-old Florentine had made it. They credited the work to a more famous Lombard sculptor. So according to Vasari, Michelangelo slipped into the basilica with a chisel and carved his name in Latin across the sash running between Mary's breasts: MICHAELANGELUS BONAROTUS FLORENTINUS FACIEBAT. "Michelangelo Buonarroti, the Florentine, made this." Then he vowed never to sign another work. He kept that vow. Through the David. Through the Sistine Chapel. Through the dome of St. Peter's. Through 65 more years of work, until he died at 88. Not one of them bears his name. What I can never quite get over is that he was only 23 when he started. A young man who believed he could carve the most beautiful object on earth. And then he did... If you enjoyed this, I write a newsletter read by over 50,000 people who love rediscovering the wonder and beauty of the past, one story at a time. You can join us here: james-lucas.com/welcome History is more beautiful than we remember.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Humans tried to tame horses 5,500 years ago. It didn't work. Those horses eventually went feral, and we had to start over 1,300 years later with a different bloodline. A group in Kazakhstan called the Botai kept horses for milk and meat around 3500 BCE. A 2021 Nature study read the DNA of 273 ancient horses and proved every horse alive today comes from a different population entirely. The successful domestication happened 4,200 years ago near the Volga and Don rivers. Those horses spread across Asia and Europe in 500 years, wiping out every other horse bloodline. Two tiny changes in horse DNA made it work. One mutation appeared about 5,000 years ago and made horses less jumpy. The other came 4,200 years ago and gave horses backs strong enough to carry a grown person; before that, they were the size of ponies. This is why chariots came first as the main use of horses, and regular horseback riding only became common centuries later. Before rideable horses reached the Middle East, the Sumerians made their own by crossbreeding domesticated donkeys with wild onagers, a wild Asian cousin of the donkey. Onagers can hit 43 mph and hold 31 mph for hours, with more endurance than any modern racehorse. But they bite, kick, and can't be trained. So Sumerians made a hybrid called a kunga, which kept the speed and dropped the temper. A kunga cost 40 times a donkey. It couldn't breed, so every generation had to be made fresh. These pulled the war wagons shown on the Standard of Ur, a Sumerian mosaic from 2500 BCE. It's the first known case of humans creating a new animal. Zebras are the longest-running failure. Romans raced them in chariots during the emperor Caracalla's reign, around 200 AD. The Dutch tried in the 1700s. Walter Rothschild even drove a zebra carriage up to Buckingham Palace in the 1890s to prove the point. Germans gave it a shot in colonial East Africa. None of it worked. Zebras dodge lassos with a quick ducking reflex, have no hierarchy you can slot into, and have spent millions of years evolving alongside lions. A single kick can break a lion's jaw. Jared Diamond ran the math on this. Out of roughly 148 large mammal species humans could have tamed, only 14 ever worked. The animal has to pass six separate tests: eat flexibly, grow fast, breed in a pen, stay calm, not spook easily, and follow a pack order. Miss one and the whole thing collapses. The earliest confirmed horse riders were the Yamnaya, a nomadic steppe people from north of the Black Sea. They left behind skeletons showing the specific hip damage and healed fall injuries you see in modern riders. Out of 156 adult skeletons studied, only 24 had the pattern. Even inside a horse-riding culture, most people still walked.
Jum@JesterJum

How many animals did humans have to try and ride before we found out horses were cool with it?

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Dani Samaniego
Dani Samaniego@danisama13·
@WarisJL Esa es la idea, es lo que todos los paraguayos queremos y vamos bien. Ojalá sigamos así.
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Pokemon Trainer Waris ⭐
Yo creo que no hay un país menos conocido en Latinoamérica que Paraguay. Tú nunca escuchas nada de ese país, no conoces a nadie de ahí, no sabes de nada ni en las noticias. Nada 🤣
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Diego
Diego@eltweetfantasma·
@andrea_economia Aca es al reves. Nos gusta que vengan extranjeros a comprar en zonas sobrevaloradas a precios delirantes
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Andrea
Andrea@andrea_economia·
Asunción, capital de Paraguay 🇵🇾 Desde 29.400€, obra nueva. Con piscina, zona barbacoa, espacios de coworking, gimnasio y terraza solárium. Y sí, a los paraguayos no les hace gracia que vayan extranjeros a comprar, igual que a nosotros nos jode ver cómo medio Madrid, Málaga o Valencia se pone imposible para el currante de aquí. Pero esto es el mercado amigos.
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ALLATRA IPM
ALLATRA IPM@allatra_ipm·
Microplastics are already inside us and they are affecting our health. Professor Ragusa explains where the real problem lies and why it's not just about plastic. Are you ready to find out what each of us needs to do to solve this problem? For more details, follow the link.
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Dani Samaniego
Dani Samaniego@danisama13·
Hoy desperté, un olorcito dulsong se apoderó de mi mente
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Dani Samaniego
Dani Samaniego@danisama13·
Por guita baila el mono y vos no tenes swing
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juanjo
juanjo@guarever_·
No estoy entendiendo el tráfico sobre mcal lopez un jueves a las 19:45
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Jedi Rich
Jedi Rich@jedirich_·
Hard Rock Las Vegas is bringing something back the Strip almost never does: balcony suites. That’s a BIG deal. Balconies are extremely rare in Vegas hotels — not by accident. Most resorts avoid them due to liability, safety concerns, and design economics. The one major exception has been The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas — and there’s a reason for that. It was originally built as a condo project before the 2008 crash killed that model. The units were never sold, it became a hotel — but the balconies stayed. Vegas actually tried this twice. One became Cosmo — a hit with terraces. The other was The Harmon — a condo tower at CityCenter that never even opened due to structural defects… and had to be demolished. After that (and the financial crash), developers moved away from condo-style builds entirely. Outside of Cosmo? Very limited inventory: • A few specialty suites at Bellagio • Some off-Strip or legacy properties • Almost nothing mainstream on the Strip That’s why Cosmo balconies became such a signature differentiator. Now Hard Rock is stepping into that lane. If they execute this right, these won’t just be rooms — they’ll be premium inventory with real pricing power. Bottom line: Balconies aren’t normal here. #vegas
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