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Y dale con que la abuela fuma...Que no. Que Europa tiene de todo. No es la primera en todo, ni falta que hace, y sí lo es en muchas cosas.Y luego la métrica: es aquí donde tenemos (los curritos) 30 días de vacaciones, y donde se vive más y mejor. Punto. No nos gana nadie a nada. Metéoslo en la cabeza. La competición la ha ganado Europa de calle.-----De verdad que no os entiendo.
Es la primera vez que llamamos a consultas al embajador en Tel Aviv?España llama a consultas a su embajadora en Tel Aviv tras las acusaciones de Israel de "corrupción" y "antisemitismo" | Vozpópuli https://share.google/FjQAUFWCDwtboeqMo
Cita de: sudden and sharp en Ayer a las 15:37:42Y dale con que la abuela fuma...Que no. Que Europa tiene de todo. No es la primera en todo, ni falta que hace, y sí lo es en muchas cosas.Y luego la métrica: es aquí donde tenemos (los curritos) 30 días de vacaciones, y donde se vive más y mejor. Punto. No nos gana nadie a nada. Metéoslo en la cabeza. La competición la ha ganado Europa de calle.-----De verdad que no os entiendo.Hombre, Sudden. En lo que es la parte de la tecnología, al menos ahí no digas que no hablo con conocimiento de causa.Compro sin problemas, porque es verdad, que aquí en los trabajos no se echan tantas horas como en EEUU o en otros países fuera de aquí. Pero en general en lo que son las tecnológicas europeas, y he currado en varias, estoy aburrido de ver poca inversión, mucho inmovilismo, y mucha burocracia.¿Quieres un ejemplo concreto? Tener que hacer poco menos que un cónclave con un equipo de Project Managers para decidir si cambiar un simple flag lógico en una llamada a un servidor. Un valor 'verdadero' o 'falso', para entendernos. Por tener todas las plataformas "alineadas". Web, iPhone, Android, etc.Y que encima se enfaden si tomamos los ingenieros la decisión lógica y coherente que se ventila en minutos.No todas las empresas americanas (o asiáticas) le dan más poder a los ingenieros y menos a los engominaos y las gafapastas, pero la tendencia que conozco en mis carnes es ésa.¿Que en Europa tenemos 30 días de vacaciones, cosa que no tiene nadie? Eso está muy bien mientras haya dinerito en la caja. El día que no lo haya, ¿qué pasará?Y por eso varios como Pollo y yo nos tiramos de los pelos por las cosas que hemos visto, y vemos. Por poner un ejemplo fácil de entender, las 15 champions del Real Madrid o las 5 del Barça no son ningún escudo para estar en Primera División de por vida. Creo recordar que sólo una vez, allá por los 30-40, el Barça tuvo que jugar una promoción de permanencia en Primera. Si la Segunda ni la huelen es porque incluso en malos años tienen fuerza de sobra para evitar descender. ¿Estamos seguros de que Europa está en la misma situación?Porque sí, se puede bajar a Segunda el mismo año que se juega Champions. Si no recuerdo mal, en Vigo y San Sebastián saben bien de esto.
OpenAI Says Its Business Will Burn $115 Billion Through 2029Posted by msmash on Monday September 08, 2025 @10:40AM from the all-the-money-in-the-world dept.An anonymous reader shares a report:CitarOpenAI recently had both good news and bad news for shareholders. Revenue growth from ChatGPT is accelerating at a more rapid rate than the company projected half a year ago. The bad news? The computing costs to develop artificial intelligence that powers the chatbot, and other data center-related expenses, will rise even faster.As a result, OpenAI projected its cash burn this year through 2029 will rise even higher than previously thought, to a total of $115 billion. That's about $80 billion higher than the company previously expected. The unprecedented projected cash burn, which would add to the roughly $2 billion it burned in the past two years, helps explain why the company is raising more capital than any private company in history.
OpenAI recently had both good news and bad news for shareholders. Revenue growth from ChatGPT is accelerating at a more rapid rate than the company projected half a year ago. The bad news? The computing costs to develop artificial intelligence that powers the chatbot, and other data center-related expenses, will rise even faster.As a result, OpenAI projected its cash burn this year through 2029 will rise even higher than previously thought, to a total of $115 billion. That's about $80 billion higher than the company previously expected. The unprecedented projected cash burn, which would add to the roughly $2 billion it burned in the past two years, helps explain why the company is raising more capital than any private company in history.
CitarOpenAI Says Its Business Will Burn $115 Billion Through 2029Posted by msmash on Monday September 08, 2025 @10:40AM from the all-the-money-in-the-world dept.An anonymous reader shares a report:CitarOpenAI recently had both good news and bad news for shareholders. Revenue growth from ChatGPT is accelerating at a more rapid rate than the company projected half a year ago. The bad news? The computing costs to develop artificial intelligence that powers the chatbot, and other data center-related expenses, will rise even faster.As a result, OpenAI projected its cash burn this year through 2029 will rise even higher than previously thought, to a total of $115 billion. That's about $80 billion higher than the company previously expected. The unprecedented projected cash burn, which would add to the roughly $2 billion it burned in the past two years, helps explain why the company is raising more capital than any private company in history.Saludos.
French government collapses as PM François Bayrou loses confidence votePresident Emmanuel Macron will look for a replacement who can break the budget impasse
Mapped: Europe’s Projected Population Crash by 2100Pallavi Rao / Graphics/Design: Amy Kuo · 2025.03.25Visualizing Europe’s Projected Population Crash by 2100This map shows Europe’s projected population change for every European country between now and the year 2100.Only sovereign countries are included on this map. Ukraine figures include Crimea.Data is sourced from the UN World Population Prospects 2024, using their medium variant estimates (*)Eastern and Southern Europeans are Moving West and NorthDue to declining fertility rates, every European country will see deaths outnumber births by 2100.However, Eastern and Southern Europe will see the largest declines relative to their current population.This group is led by Ukraine; the UN projects it will lose 61% of its population in the next 75 years.Note: Figures rounded.Aside from falling births, there is also a pattern of migration out of the entire region.This migration—usually west, or out of Europe altogether—is not new. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, Europeans have been leaving former Soviet-era countries.A lack of jobs and opportunities to increase income and wealth make many of them economic migrants.Meanwhile, some Western European countries (UK, France) may see single-digit population growth, due to immigration.Is This a Problem For Europe?These figures come at a time within the larger context of immigrants in Europe.In the last decade Europe has seen an upsurge in anti-immigrant sentiment. However, economically, these immigrants could be a key to Europe’s future.According to this Guardian investigation, immigrants are currently the stopgap between Europe’s gradual population fall and a rapid decline. A quick crash leads to shrinking workforces, which place higher burdens on social security nets, in turn leading to higher taxes.The tax-to-GDP ratios for several European countries have already climbed in the last two decades—and top the rest of the world.Then, falling consumer demand could lead to fewer jobs and higher unemployment. This could make higher tax burdens untenable, affecting social cohesion.In the absence of significant technological changes, the continent’s reputation for a high standard of living could deteriorate rapidly._____________(*) The medium variant is the most-likely outcome, after the UN takes into account birth and death rates, and migration patterns.
Homebuyer shortage forces many sellers to lower prices, walk away as slump drags onThe housing market is becoming more buyer-friendly after years of sharply rising prices