a group of scientists just changed it

Predict a solar flare it’s not simple. What is normally done is to use high-resolution instruments to follow the propagation of a coronal mass ejection that has already occurred and thus decide whether precautions should be taken on Earth. Unfortunately, there is not always time to design an action plan. Therefore, the ideal would be to predict the solar flare before it occurs. Until now, this has not been possible. However, last May a team of scientists from the New Jersey Institute of Technology discovered a series of changes in the atmosphere of the sun that could be the prelude to a solar flare. Three parameters. These scientists they observed that in the three hours before a solar flare, very specific changes occurred in three parameters of the plasma that makes up the solar atmosphere. Brightness, movement towards or against the observer and non-thermal speed. The latter measures certain turbulent changes and low-scale motions in the plasma. It was seen that, during the indicated period, all these parameters increase. But, in addition, within this increase, there are also regular cycles that last between 18 and 21 minutes. At the moment it has only been observed before a solar eruption, but if it is observed in others it could be the prediction we have been waiting for for so long. The right place at the right time. The authors of this study worked with the help of the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) from NASA, whose mission is to concisely analyze very narrow fragments of the solar atmosphere. They used it to analyze a region of the Sun in which several solar flares had been detected in recent days. This meant that It was a very active regionalthough it could not be known for sure that another solar flare would occur. However, they were fortunate that they did indeed have the right instruments in the right place at the right time. The risks. Solar flares are explosions of electromagnetic radiation that occur in the solar atmosphere. They are often followed by solar flares, in which, in addition to radiation, powerful bursts of plasma are produced. That is, a large number of electrically charged particles are shot from the Sun. When these gusts When they impact the Earth’s magnetosphere, they can be deflected or penetrate through it and reach the atmosphere of our planet. If that happens, phenomena as beautiful as auroras or as dangerous as geomagnetic storms can occur. These generally do not pose a risk to humans, but they do alter our telecommunications infrastructureswith everything that entails. We will have to investigate more. At the moment, it is not known why these changes in the plasma occur just before a solar flare. In fact, further research will be necessary to verify whether these changes in the plasma also occur with other solar flares. If so, astrophysicists might finally have tools to predict geomagnetic storms well in advance. There would be no need to wait for the flare, time could be gained. In cases like this, time is money. Image | POT In Xataka | A sunspot 17 times larger than Earth caused red auroras across half the world. It is a very rare event

opinions, first contact and photos

So far this year, between January and May 2026, 62,388 plug-in hybrid cars have been sold in Spain. 16% of these sales are accumulated by BYD Seal U DM-i and BYD Atto 2 DM-ithe two best-selling cars in Spain powered by this technology. A proposal that is not only the best-selling, has also opened a gap with the Toyota C-HR which last year fought to be the best-selling in Spain among plug-in hybrids. The Chinese company has found a market niche to exploit. The first of those mentioned above served as a thermometer to verify that the water in the electric car pool was still somewhat cold in our country and that it was worth betting on a technology that, as they told us On the brand presentation day back in 2023, they were not going to offer. Now, with the spaces of the large plug-in hybrid family SUV and the compact SUV covered, the urban SUV remained to be covered. A segment where, directly, the company does not have any type of rival. And the fact is that electrifying the B segment and the concessions that have to be made with it have discouraged manufacturers. The BYD Dolphin G DM-i arrives with the purpose of being a best-seller where it has no rival. BYD Dolphin G DM-i technical data sheet byd Dolphin (204 HP with 60.4 kWh battery) BODY TYPE. Compact five-seater SUV MEASUREMENTS AND WEIGHT. 4,160 meters long, 1,770 meters wide, 1,570 meters high and 2,700 meters wheelbase. Weight to be confirmed. TRUNK. 425 liters. MAXIMUM POWER. 156 kW (212 hp) WLTP CONSUMPTION. Active version: 2.6 l/100 km and 40 km of autonomy Boost, Comfort and Sport version: 1.4 l/100 km and 105 km of autonomy ENVIRONMENTAL DISTINCTIVE. Zero emissions DRIVING AIDS (ADAS). Automatic emergency braking, intelligent speed limit information, detection of vehicles in the blind spot, intelligent cruise control, LED lighting, 360º parking camera, rear parking sensors. OTHERS. Own software compatible with Android Auto and Apple CarPlay. Google services starting with Boost version or higher. 10.1-inch (Active) and 12.8-inch (Boost, Comfort and Sport) screen. Heated seats and steering wheel. ELECTRIC HYBRID. No. Plug-in HYBRID. Yeah. Active version: 175 HP and 40 km of autonomy Boost, Comfort and Sport version: 212 HP and 105 km of autonomy electric No. price and release Now available without aid or discounts: Active: €25,200 Boost: €28,200 Comfort: €29,700 Sport: €30,700 Now available with (advance) aid and discounts: Active: €18,700 Boost: €21,376 Comfort: €22,846 Sport: €23,826 When you are your own rival On March 31, 2023 we counted the arrival of BYD to Spain. 27 days later we tell that Plug-in hybrids are not for small cars. In that article we explained that the B segment was left orphaned by plug-in hybridization with the discontinuation of the Renault Captur that featured this technology. The plug-in hybrid in the low ranges has had two obvious problems. The first, almost testimonial trunks, victims of much larger batteries than those of a non-plug-in hybrid. And, above all, the price. Electrifying this type of car was so expensive that the final cost for the customer skyrocketed. The result was very low sales and a price that kept rising to compensate. In the case of the Renault Captur, In 2020 the car already cost 30,160 euros (today it would be 37,941 euros, using the INE calculator to update the price). The SUV could cover 50 kilometers in completely electric mode and its trunk was reduced from more than 400 liters of the non-electrified versions to just 265 liters. It’s not the worst. Compared to the basic versions, the plug-in hybrid was 151% more expensive in 2023 than the more modest options, making it difficult to justify the investment. The departure of the Captur seemed to represent the death of the small plug-in hybrid. But BYD has set out to conquer this market as well. The same old BYD recipe “The BYD Dolphin G DM-i is an electric car to which we added an efficient 98 HP 1.5 naturally aspirated engine,” BYD tells us before we get into the cars. And, perhaps, that is the key to everything. Until now, what we have seen among plug-in hybrids were adaptations of combustion versions to a more electrified proposal, putting the batteries where they could. BYD’s small plug-in hybrid comes from the opposite proposal. The car is based on the electric car, which allows it to add a battery without sacrificing trunk space. That is why the most modest version has a 7.4 kWh battery that allows it to travel 40 kilometers, but the most ambitious ones increase this to 18.3 kWh and reach 105 kilometers in completely electric mode according to the WLTP combined cycle. In the city, the autonomy reaches up to 150 km before depleting the battery. This allows you to kill two birds with one stone. The first thing is that the trunk and space for rear passengers remains intact, with a cargo space of 425 liters, which keeps it a very valid option for long trips. The second thing is that it works as a parallel series hybrid. That is, the vast majority of the time, it is the electric motors that drive the wheels and, if necessary, the gasoline engine can do the same but most of the time it will act as an electricity generator for the battery. With this system, the car feels like an electric car and the engine works at the most efficient rpm, where it consumes less energy to fill the battery. If necessary, when more power is unexpectedly demanded, that is when the gasoline engine also pushes the wheels. In these cases, the car can develop up to 175 HP of power in the small battery option and 212 HP in the large battery option. Consumption notices it. BYD approves a consumption of 2.6 l/100 km for the small battery and only 1.4 l/100 km for the large battery according to the WLTP cycle. But, in addition, the … Read more

ByteDance has decided that Intel and AMD are too expensive. So you’re going to make your own CPUs

ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, has been purchasing the processors it needs for its data centers from Intel and AMD for many years. He’s going to stop doing it. And this Chinese company has decided that this model has just come to an end. According to Reutersis already developing its own processors with the purpose of supporting its infrastructure. artificial intelligence (IA) in response to a combination of supply shortages and price increases that have made dependence on external suppliers unsustainable. The increases are not marginal: Intel and AMD have raised their rates between 10% and 35% quarter by quarter in recent months, a pressure that is difficult to bear for a company that plans to invest around $22.8 billion in AI infrastructure during 2026. However, the underlying trigger is not only the price. The industry is experiencing a structural change in the way AI is used because it has left behind the phase of mass training of models dominated by Nvidia GPUs to enter into the age of inference. That type of workload demands much more from the CPUs, which work in tandem with the GPUs and have become the new bottleneck of AI. The most immediate consequence of this scenario is a shortage of processors that Intel and AMD are not able to meet. In fact, the company led by Lip-Bu Tan has warned its Chinese customers, again according to Reutersthat their delivery times are going to be extended up to six months. And Lisa Su, the CEO of AMD, has declared that the global CPU market is stressed and the situation is not going to improve in the short term. ByteDance has two weapons: Arm and RISC-V The strategy that ByteDance has developed involves developing two architectures in parallel: one based on Arm and another on RISC-V, the open source standard that China has embraced with great interest precisely because of its independence from Western licenses. Designing two variants simultaneously is not at all a symptom of indecision: it responds to the usual coverage of large technology companies before committing to large-scale production of a specific proposal. In 2024 ByteDance partnered with Broadcom to design a custom AI accelerator and manufacture it with TSMC’s 5nm lithography ByteDance has been hiring talent specialized in chips since 2022. In 2024 it partnered with Broadcom to design a custom AI accelerator and manufacture it using TSMC’s 5nm lithography, known as the SeedChip. Its mass production is planned for this year. However, the CPU it is developing is a different piece of the puzzle: a general-purpose processor for servers and not a specialized accelerator. Even so, both initiatives point in the same direction: they pursue reduce dependence on external suppliers in a context in which US export restrictions and market volatility make this dependence increasingly costly. This moment is also relevant because of what is happening at the other end of the market. Nvidia has built its dominance on GPUs, but is now entering the CPU market with your Vera processors with the intention of capturing an additional $200 billion market. In March it also presented an inference system developed with Groq technology in a clear attempt to consolidate its positions before the fragmentation of the AI ​​chip market reduces its share. Be that as it may, ByteDance for the moment continues to depend on Nvidia for its GPUs, although it is already playing on that same board with its own cards. Image | Intel More information | Reuters In Xataka | The condemnation that afflicts China: after decades of manufacturing a competitive desktop processor, it is six years behind

There are still 88 games to watch. And this is the cheapest way for it

We may still be a little down because of Spain’s draw yesterday, but there is a lot of World Cup left past. RTVE is offering several matches open and free, although if we want to see everything, then we have to subscribe to DAZN. And how much does that cost? If you do it a certain way, it can cost you a total of 35.97 euros. We tell you how to do it. Two months ‘Made in USA’ + the entire Soccer World Cup The price could vary. We earn commission from these links DAZN’s permanent plans are not worth it to watch the World Cup The Qatar World Cup, which was also broadcast in its entirety by DAZN, It cost a total of 19.99 euros. Beyond the price, the important thing about this event was that it was not necessary to have an active subscription to this platform. All you had to do was pay that amount and you could watch the entire World Cup with your account. That does not happen with this 2026 World Cup. Let’s go in parts. There are two ways to watch the World Cup: either choose the DAZN Premium Plan (which includes the World Cup and other competitions, such as F1, Moto GP or some LaLiga matches) or subscribe to one of the other DAZN plans and add the World Cup package to these. Spoiler: this last option is what is cheaper. As you can see in the image above, the Premium plan has a price of 25.99 euros per month. The problem is that, to access this price, we will have a stay of 12 months. If we want to avoid this, we will have to pay 44.99 euros per month and, since we have to subscribe for two months to see the entire World Cup (it is June 16 and ends on June 19), we would have to pay a total of 89.98 euros). This can be avoided. To do this, the ideal is to take the cheapest plan that DAZN has (right now, it is the so-called ‘Made in USA’) and add the World Cup package. This would be the breakdown: Plan ‘Made in USA: without permanence, costs 7.99 euros per month. Package ‘World Cup 2026‘: costs 19.99 euros and gives you access to the entire competition. Total: As there are two months, we would have to pay a total of 15.98 euros plus the 19.99 euros for the World Cup package. That is, 35.97 euros. Of course, it must be taken into account that DAZN requires all its users a 30-day notice to cancel. It is important to comply with this, since otherwise we would have to pay an extra month and the final price would become more expensive. ⚡ IN SUMMARY: world cup in dazn ✅ THE BEST There are almost 90 games left: If you like football, you will still be able to watch 88 games. You can see them on TV, mobile or tablet: The DAZN app is available for a multitude of devices, ideal if you want to watch a game away from home. ❌ THE WORST More expensive than the previous World Cup: Even if you subscribe in the cheapest way possible, the price to see the World Cup has almost doubled compared to that of Qatar. There are early morning games: There are some games that are being held after midnight, which makes it difficult to see them all. 💡SUBSCRIBE IF… You want to see more games than those that are broadcast openly, even those that are in the early hours of the morning. ⛔ DO NOT SUBSCRIBE IF… It seems too expensive to you or you don’t think you will see the games that are at a bad time in Spain. You may also be interested XIAOMI TV F Pro 75, 75 Inch (190 cm), 4K UHD QLED, Smart TV, Fire OS8, Alexa Voice Control, HDR10+, Game Boost Mode 120Hz, MEMC, 2GB+32GB, Compatible with Apple AirPlay The price could vary. We earn commission from these links TCL 65Q6C Television 65 Inch QD-Mini LED 4K Smart TV, 1000 nits, 144Hz Motion Clarity Pro, Onkyo 2.1, Game Master, FreeSync, Google TV, Dolby Vision IQ and Atmos The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Some of the links in this article are affiliated and may provide a benefit to Xataka. In case of non-availability, offers may vary. Images | DAZN In Xataka | Where you can watch the 2026 World Cup depending on the operator you have In Xataka | How to add all the World Cup matches directly to your calendar

“Our mission is not to fight for price”

The television market in Spain had one of its worst years in 2025. According to Haier, Spaniards bought 15% fewer televisions than the previous year, and manufacturers accumulated so much unsold stock that the gap between what they put in stores and what people actually bought touched 30%. A drama. In this context, the Chinese manufacturer, which has been competing in the TV market in Spain for just three years, closed the year with a growth of 15%. And that is why in 2026 there are many eyes and hopes on the television market: with the World Cup as a great sales catalyst, everyone is putting their efforts to recover lost ground. Haier intends to continue growing and its new televisions for 2026 They make it clear that their strategy is based on two pillars: screens of up to 115 inches and MiniLED as their favorite technology. Javier Juristodirector of Haier’s TV business unit in Spain, sums it up in one sentence: “Our mission is not to fight for price.” Haier reads the market backwards Haier wants to convince that its growth is not an anomaly, but the consequence of having read the market well. The company starts from a simple idea: in televisions, it is no longer the winner who pushes the price the most, but rather the one who offers a more attractive proposal in image, sound, size and connectivity. That is why Juristo distances himself from the rest of the Chinese manufacturers and sticks out his chest when pointing out that they are not only number one in China, but also in the United States, where they hit the table with the bought General Electric ten years ago. In Europe they recognize that the market is more complex because each country has its own consumer habits. And they believe that the secret is knowing how to adapt to what the public wants in each region. That is why its expansion is going little by little. In Spain, their TVs arrived in 2023, but it was not until this same 2026 that they decided to go after the TV market of Portugal, Italy, Poland, France and the United Kingdom. This is also why they make it clear that their battle is not the price, but compete in mid-high and premium rangesomething that allows them to position themselves in a less crowded segment and, above all, less dependent on the price war. This is relevant in an environment as challenging as the current one, where the component crisis is going to complicate things even more, with rising prices for almost all consumer electronics. “A busy end of the year is coming,” Juristo confessed. The Haier TVs of 2026, at a glance Haier has organized its 2026 range in a fairly easy to read way: from the entrance TV to the large diagonal without taking too many detours. Let’s briefly review what each of them offers: The K85 It is the entrance door. It is a 4K LED that goes from 32 to 55 inches and, even so, does not give up on catching up with Google TV, Gemini and a new MediaTek processor. It is not intended to dazzle, but it is intended to make it clear that even the most affordable range already has to come connected and with intelligent functions. Part of the €399, although There is already an offer for €329. The S80 It is the one they have designed for the mass public and that is why it is the one that offers the most size options. It covers from 32 to 85 inches and is the widest QLED family in the range, so Haier is playing in the most comfortable field: that of TV for almost everyone. Fine design, Dolby Vision and a huge size fork to attack from the small living room to already quite serious diagonals. The 50-inch model starts at €519, on sale for €429 on its official website. QLED TV 50″ – Haier S80G Series H50S80GUX, QLED 4K HDR10, Google TV, AI Picture Quality, Gaming 120Hz, Black The price could vary. We earn commission from these links The S85 refines the shot more. It focuses on 50, 55 and 65 inches, right in the most disputed range on the market, and adds voice control with Gemini as the main differential argument. It is not the most spectacular in the range, but it is a way to raise the level without yet entering the most expensive territory. The 50 inch model part of the €559. The S90 It already opens another conversation. It’s still QLED, but it adds KEF sound, a British hi-fi audio brand with a good reputation among fans of this world for its technical approach and experience in speakers. In addition, it offers more muscle for gaming and sizes of 55, 65 and 75 inches. It is the series for those who are beginning to want something more on TV without spending a fortune. The 55-inch model starts at €729, although it already there is an offer for €599. S90 Series – QLED, 55 screen size, Google TV, 4K resolution The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Then there is the block MiniLEDwhere Haier puts a good part of its muscle. The M90 and the M92 They are committed to more brightness, more contrast and a more premium feel, with sizes up to 85 inches and details such as UltraSense AI, its artificial intelligence layer to automatically control settings, KEF sound and Zero Gap design (their term to promise that there is less than 40 millimeters between the wall and the TV). To give you an idea of ​​the prices, the 75-inch M92 model starts at €1,699, in offer for €1399. And above is the M96which directly plays in another league: 100 and 115 inches for those who no longer want a large TV, but a huge TV. And it pays, of course. The 100-inch one starts at €2,849, although there is a promotion … Read more

how to prevent society from collapsing because of AI

Everyone seems to be clear that AI is going to have an impact on the labor market, the problem is that They do not agree on what that impact will be like.. While some say that will destroy many jobsothers predict that will create many more. In the midst of this discussion, a group of experts met to try to imagine what the world will be like in 2030. Spoiler: it doesn’t look good. The meeting. They tell it in the Wall Street Journal. Last week, 40 experts in areas such as technology, economics and public policy met in a building in Washington. At the meeting they analyzed scenarios on how AI will transform American society by 2030. Their objective was to propose strategies to minimize the negative impact on a social level, because they assume there will be one. The meeting was organized by Windfall Trustan independent organization that seeks to anticipate and manage the changes that AI will bring, designing policies and legal frameworks so that wealth is distributed fairly. Macro prosperity. The scenario that was proposed at the meeting was called ‘Prosperity on paper’. In it, these experts draw a flourishing economy in macro indicators, but that hides an important social problem. In this scenario, AI has almost doubled the US GDP, labor productivity is skyrocketing, and the S&P500 index is rising. Micro precariousness. On paper everything is perfect, but the reality is that society is going through a serious employment problem, not because of the rise in unemployment (which is also true) but because of what they call “underemployment”, which is expected to rise from 8 to 14%. Many people have casual, part-time jobs or are forced to accept jobs for which they are overqualified. Blue collar jobs. It seems clear that the impact of AI on employment will mainly affect white-collar workers, that is, office workers. Many see an opportunity in blue collar jobs such as plumbing, electricity or masonry. However, according to these experts, although there will be an increase in demand and salaries for these professions, it will be temporary. All those office workers will flock to learn traditional trades, which will cause an increase in supply and a drop in value. cso everything bad. Experts predict that this contrast between what the data says and the reality of the working class will cause political unrest to skyrocket, the generation gap to widen, and also a decrease in the birth rate due to the discontent of young people. But not everything will be bad, they also foresee that healthcare and education will be cheaper thanks to AI tools and that people will have more free time to do creative activities. So what. The objective of the meeting was to propose possible policies to prevent this scenario from occurring and attendees had several ideas. The proposals focus on two major fronts: on the one hand, an effort to requalify and train workers, and on the other, create mechanisms that allow the wealth generated by AI to be redistributed, such as the universal basic income that Elon Musk himself mentionedspecific taxes on AI companies and even creating a sovereign fund where part of the profits go. The attendees themselves admitted that political polarization will make it very difficult to approve reforms of this caliber, although they are clear that leaving things as they are will probably be much more expensive. Image | Xataka with Gemini In Xataka | It remains to be seen if AI will take your job one day. Until then, these are the best job search tools

“It is very important to mentally label tasks”

The first day of vacation arrives, the laptop is closed and work-related cell phone notifications are silenced. But the head is still going a mile an hour without being able to take focus off of workmentally reviewing emails that have not been sent and feeling a need to find out what is happening at work. All this leads to an inability to relax on vacation, and the explanation for this is not a lack of will, but a neurological block. Because? Science has a name for what’s happening to you: information overload syndrome. And what happens in your brain before you go on vacation is the result of a neural system that has been pushed to its limits by the “infoxication“. To understand why we cannot turn off the brain at will, we must look at our metabolic energy consumption, since as detailed in a exhaustive literature review published, attention is a limited cognitive function that requires a constant flow of energy in the brain. What happens. When we are exposed to a volume of information that exceeds our processing capacity, our brain enters a phase of overactivation. Under conditions of moderate overload, the prefrontal cortex, which is the area responsible for complex decision-making and planning, becomes hyperactive to try to manage the chaos. However, if digital multitasking and the deluge of data continue, a phenomenon known as ‘neural overload’ occurs. The result. The prefrontal cortex is deactivated as a protective mechanism, and what causes constant digital multitasking causes an accumulation of glutamate in this frontal region, which physically translates into that heavy “cognitive fatigue” that we drag to the beach. But the impact does not stop at simple fatigue. Neurobiological studies have documented that this overexposure alters dopamine pathways in a way similar to that of addictive substances, reducing gray matter in areas of impulsive control and disconnecting regions of the Default Neural Network, which is precisely the brain network that allows us to daydream, wander and, ultimately, rest. The digital epidemic. Although we are now talking about social networks and artificial intelligence, the problem has been brewing for decades. Already in 1996, psychologist David Lewis proposed the term “information fatigue syndrome” in a study for Reuters, and shortly after, in 1999the specialist Alfons Cornellá coined the term infoxication to describe the information contamination to which we were beginning to be subjected. Today the different sources paint a much harsher picture, since in 2024 a study demonstrated that information overload directly leads to fatigue, culminating in emotional stress and anxiety. Added to this is a 2025 meta-analysis that warns of how current digital environments saturate our working memory, diminishing our understanding and leading us to burnout. before vacation It is when this whole neurological cocktail that we have been building explodes. Here the expert Elena Gallardo, neuroscientist, he pointed out in statements to EFE which defines this state as “mental noise.” And the fact is that, before a period of rest, the brain perceives that it must leave everything tied up and closed, which generates a peak of cognitive demand in a system that is already saturated by the year’s chronic infoxication. You have to stop. If the origin is biological and behavioral, the solution must be too. To avoid carrying “mental noise” in our suitcase, neuroscience experts propose applying what they call cognitive ergonomics, which is nothing more than strategies designed to optimize and protect our mental effort. Among the tips that this expert offers is the possibility of labeling and verbalizing tasks to prevent pending tasks from “floating” in our brain. In this way we free up the prefrontal cortex so that, when it comes to vacation, it is not so exhausted and can better process the entire avalanche of data. Images | Image from freepik In Xataka | How many vacations do I have by law: this is how the days of rest are calculated

“The first forty years of our lives provide the text; the next thirty, the commentary”

His status as a star philosophical pessimism and his most famous portraitin which we see him as an old man, disheveled, gray-haired, with a tired look and a severe rictus, has made us observe Arthur Schopenhauer with some suspicion. In an already difficult world, who would want to dedicate a few minutes to a 19th century Prussian who stood out for the crudeness with which he approached life? The reality is that in 2026 Schopenhauer is still a philosophical beacon that helps us understand issues as basic as the meaning of life. Even “the crisis of 40”. Life, like a book. Throughout his long life (he died at the age of 72) Schopenhauer dedicated himself to writing on issues as diverse as politics, aesthetics, morals, psychology, rhetoric or even about ‘the art of insulting’. Towards the end of his life, however, he published a monumental work, Parerga and Paraliomenain which he leaves a vital reflection that over the years has become one of his most famous aphorisms. And it’s normal. Ultimately, it sheds light on the meaning of life using a universal metaphor: books. What does it say exactly? That just as essays, novels or plays follow an internal structure without which they would be chaotic, life can be divided into parts that, in a certain way, explain each other. To be more precise, in his ‘Eudemonology’, Schopenhauer tells us: “In a broader sense, it can be said that the first forty years of existence provide the text and the next thirty the commentary, which then makes us understand well the true meaning, then the morality and all the subtleties (…). At the end of life there is something that reminds us of the end of a masked ball, when the masked men retire.” Is it the only quote on the subject? No. In his work, Schopenhauer, who was already over 60 years old when it was published Parerga and Paralipomenagives us many other phrases that point in a similar direction. For example: “In youth, contemplation dominates; in mature age, reflection. That is why the first is the age of poetry; the second, that of philosophy. In practice, likewise, one is determined by perception and its impression during youth; Later, by reflection.” “This comes partly from the fact that in middle age images have been presented and grouped around notions in sufficient numbers to give them importance, weight and value, as well as to moderate at the same time, for custom, the impression of perceptions.”. “Only he who reaches old age receives a complete and measured representation of life, since he encompasses it at a glance in its fullness and in its natural course, in a special way and not merely as others do, only from its beginning, but also from its end, through which he perfectly recognizes its vanity. What do you want to tell us? May your reflections have had so much success It’s not surprising at all. Faced with frustration, defeatism or even pessimism due to the passage of time, Schopenhauer basically reminds us that each period of life has its function in the story of life, just like the parts of a book. During the years of youth we ‘write’ the text, we make decisions, we accumulate experiences, we make mistakes and successes and, ultimately, we form our character and set a path for ourselves both at a professional and personal level. In the second half of life, as we mature, turning 40, it is time to look back and adopt a critical approach that gives us coherence. Beyond Schopenhauer. As remember in TrendsSchopenhauer’s theory connects with those of other actors, such as the psychiatrist Robert N. Butler, who in the 1960s described the tendency of people to review their own biography when they reach old age to make sense of it. After all, we are not just a concatenation of decisions and events, but the story that we ourselves shape and build with those pieces, a story that is in the process of being rewritten. Why at 40 years old? Schopenhauer wrote in the 19th century, the one in which he lived, and this is perceived in his essays. For example, he marks the turning point at 40 years old and outlines a life horizon of another 30 years ahead. The reality is that right now life expectancy in Spain is over 84 years old. That being true, it is undeniable that the Prussian had amazing aim. Today experts use a concept called reminiscence bump (reminiscence peak) that describes how when entering adulthood, at 30 or more years old, our autobiographical memory becomes especially active. The phenomenon connects in some way with Schopenhauer’s metaphor. “He reminiscence peak refers to the disproportionate amount of autobiographical memories dating from adolescence and early adulthood. It has often been attributed to the consolidation of the mature self in the period encompassed by that peak,” they explain researchers Jonathan Koppel and Dorthe Berntsen. Other authors they define it such as “the increase in the proportion of autobiographical memories of youth observed in those over 40 years of age.” Centering the focus. Does that mean that after 40 the past defeats us? Are we condemned to live chained to continuous memory? No. What Schopenhauer tells us is that when we reach adulthood the focus changes: beyond the experiences or decisions, the story matters. We discover the meaning of the path we have traveled and see things more clearly. We move from the age of poetry to the age of philosophy, paraphrasing Schopenhauer. The reflection of Qarerga and Paralipomena It helps us better understand Schopenhauer’s multifaceted and nuanced thought. To that and something more: understanding that, beyond the patina it may have, philosophical pessimism it’s not exactly the same than psychological pessimism. On the contrary, authors like Schopenhauer offer a path that can be followed with a positive attitude and helps to avoid the goodness that has made happiness an industry. Images | Wikipedia 1 and 2 Via | Trends In … Read more

something is wrong with the relationship between the sea and the atmosphere

We are in the middle of June and it doesn’t seem like it, but the western Mediterranean is burning. And no, it is not an exaggeration: we are talking about a marine heat wave with peaks of surface anomaly greater than 5 degrees in specific areas. It is what experts call in technical jargon, a gigantic problem. Especially, facing autumn. A ticking time bomb. The great temptation when we see this type of data is to plot a direct line between sea temperature in June and DANAs in October. But it would be a mistake. The mechanism exists, of course. However, the matter is a little more complex than we might think. This is because the overheated sea is not a forecast of how much autumn rain we are going to suffer: it is a gauge of the ceiling of intensity that these rains can reach. The effect of an anomalously warm Mediterranean is to charge the atmosphere with water vapor and thus raise the amount of water that a DANA can precipitate. But, and this is crucial, the trigger is atmospheric. It is useless to have a charged atmosphere without a mass of cold air at altitude that is detached from the general circulation. What’s new? What is genuinely new is not that the Mediterranean is hot. It is, in fact, from 2022 on a sustained basis. What is new is that we have had a marine heat wave since May. That is, long before the historical calendar and still very far from the warmest moment (August). Furthermore, whether we want to see it or not, El Niño is just around the corner and, although we hope not to receive its wildest impacts, the heat it will bring to the world makes experts very worried. Why is it relevant? The data is clear. The Mediterranean basin heats up around 20% faster than the global ocean average and is trailing a streak of unprecedented records: 18 of the 20 highest daily values ​​since 1982 were recorded between 2023 and 2024 (with a maximum of 28.15 °C on August 10, 2024). The memory of the DANA of Valencia is still fresh and the certainty that the situation is getting worse It is a slab for the national climate conversation. Are we going to get worse? It’s pure physics: a warmer sea increases evaporation and the water vapor content of the atmosphere (at a rate of 7% more vapor for each degree). The best example is Storm Daniel which, as the researchers showedit would have been much more unlikely without climate change. That is why it is advisable to be precise and not take things out of context. The current scenario is problematic because if a DANA forms on the Mediterranean coast this autumn, it will have more fuel available to discharge more intense rains than with a cold sea. If it is not formed, nothing has to happen. Image | Copernicus In Xataka | We already know exactly how much climate change was to blame for DANA in Valencia (and the figures are devastating)

A Chinese billionaire bought the most expensive house in London. What happened next is a real estate horror movie

In 2021, the Evergrande collapse It erased more than $300 billion in liabilities and triggered a real estate crisis that shook all of China. Among his most extravagant assets was a record mansion in London that today remains trapped in lawsuits, divorces and frozen accounts: a financial ruin turned into an empty monument. The perfect purchase that went wrong. Year 2020, a Chinese billionaire buys for 210 million pounds number 2-8A Rutland Gate, then the most expensive home ever sold in the United Kingdom. On paper it was the definitive investment: a palace with 45 rooms, four elevators, an indoor pool, 24 marble bathrooms and privileged views of Hyde Park. But what seemed like a prestige move ended up leading to a chain of misfortunes so strange that it seems written like a thriller. Since then no one has lived inside, the real owner was caught in a financial collapse and the building became an empty shell with only one “tenant”. Palace with a cursed past. The history of the building was already coming loaded with symbolism. For decades it was the London palace of Rafik Haririwho transformed it by joining together several Victorian houses and decorating it with almost obscene luxury, from gold-plated trash cans to bathrooms encrusted with semi-precious stones. Hariri was assassinated in Beirut in 2005 and, after passing through the hands of the Saudi royal family, the interior was auctioned piece by piece in 2015. That left the mansion empty, as if it had been dismantled before its next owner arrived. The Evergrande turn. The official buyer of 2020 appeared to be the Hong Kong tycoon Cheung Chung-kiubut later was discovered that the real owner was Hui Ka Yanfounder from Evergrande and for years the richest man in China. And there the descent began. Just a year later, Evergrande began with non-payment of debtsbecame a symbol of the Chinese real estate collapse and ended up collapsing in 2024. Hui ended up declaring guilty of fraud and other financial crimes, while the mansion was trapped in a legal tangle: registered in the name of his ex-wife, with frozen assets and no possibility of sale. The most expensive house in the United Kingdom lost in limbo and a symbol of the real estate gap. Fernstedt at the entrance to the house The empty house and the Swede on the porch. And it is at this point in history where the image appears that changes everything to this day. While inside the mansion there are dozens of empty rooms and millions of pounds tied up, outside, on the same porch, lives Anders Fernstedta homeless Swede who has been living at the entrance for three years. Your “camp” It is made of umbrellas, flowers, broken bicycles and stuffed animals. The paradox could not be starker, because he sleeps inches from one of the most crazy expensive shelters in Europe, but separated by a door that never opens. Ironically, the only stable inhabitant of the house does not have access to it. The fall of Anders. As to the history of man Swedish, is almost as chaotic as the architecture on which it rests. Andres was a technology journalist, then he worked in horticulture, collaborated with people from the Silicon Valley environment and even worked for The Economist as a freelance fact-checker. However, a chain of failed jobs, evictions, attacks and personal losses dragged him onto the streets. He ended up landing in front of the palace purely by chance: He was looking for a covered shelter and found an empty porch. He has since converted that space into a kind of makeshift garden and permanent bedroom. The symbol of a broken city. It had an extensive Guardian report that the story of Rutland Gate sums up a huge contradiction in London. While more than 300,000 homes remain empty in England and hundreds of thousands are waiting for a house, one of the most luxurious properties in the country has been closed for years because it is, in reality, a frozen financial asset. From that perspective, it is no longer a home, it is a figure trapped in offshore companies, lawsuits and bankruptcies. And in front of that door, every night, a man sleeps what represents just the other end of the system: someone with nothing, living in the shadow of a palace that no one can use. Image | Gareth E. Kegg In Xataka | Now that the Pope is in Spain, he should visit this surgeon’s castle. Inside is the smallest church on the planet In Xataka | In 1972 Italy wanted to put an entire city in a one kilometer building. Half a century later he is still paying the consequences

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