La IA no viene a sustituir—viene a escalarte.

“La mente no termina en el cráneo. Se expande en herramientas, notas, rutinas… y ahora, modelos de lenguaje.” — Andy Clark (traducido sin permiso, porque pensar es libre) Otro informe, otro titular catastrofista (o no, el tiempo lo dirá…) Esta vez lleva sello MIT: midieron cómo reacciona el cerebro al escribir con y sin IA. Resultado: quienes escriben con IA sin criterio recuerdan menos y … Continue reading La IA no viene a sustituir—viene a escalarte.

Thanks, Dad – Not a father’s day post you would imagine

I was scrolling LinkedIn today—doomscrolling, honestly—and there it was: a flood of Father’s Day posts. People I respect. People who inspire me. Sharing stories of the men who raised them. The lessons. The warmth. The silent strength.How those fathers shaped them—not just professionally, but as people. As parents. And here’s the part that hits: I didn’t get that. For years, I carried this complaint—quiet sometimes, … Continue reading Thanks, Dad – Not a father’s day post you would imagine

The Strange and New Light State

What About Our Future If I told you that scientists have just turned light into a kind of matter that behaves like a liquid and a solid at the same time, you’d probably ask what sci-fi show I was watching. But this isn’t fiction. It’s real. It’s cutting-edge physics. And it might just reshape how we think about the universe. Researchers at Italy’s National Research … Continue reading The Strange and New Light State

AI Wants to Eat the Grid: Will Humanity Feed It or Fry First?

The Quiet Emergency Behind the AI BoomEveryone is excited about AI breaking records, writing code, designing new medicines, and maybe even thinking like us. But there is one big problem growing behind all of this: electricity. For example, training GPT-3 used 1,287 megawatt-hours of energy—enough to power 100,000 homes. Every time someone asks ChatGPT a question, it uses about five times more electricity than a … Continue reading AI Wants to Eat the Grid: Will Humanity Feed It or Fry First?

Educating Is Difficult — But AI Just Made It Borderless

It’s official. The week is almost over, but something stayed with me, and I can’t log off before sharing it. A quote. A spark. A sentence from Paula Harraca that hit like a quiet truth we’ve always known, but rarely pause to acknowledge: “Teaching is easy because it has to do with knowing; educating is difficult because it has to do with being.” In that … Continue reading Educating Is Difficult — But AI Just Made It Borderless