Sam Altman says he’s terrified of a world where AI companies believe themselves to be more powerful than the government. It’s just what you’re building

Sam Altman sat down over the weekend before his audience at X to answer questions about the agreement that OpenAI has just signed with the United States War Department. What came out of that session was a beautiful involuntary x-ray of the biggest contradiction in the sector at the moment. Why is it important. The CEO of OpenAI said he is terrified of “a world where AI companies act as if they have more power than the government.” The phrase sounds good, it is marketinian and seeks to elevate OpenAI’s position as a powerful but very responsible and honest group. The problem is the context in which he pronounces it: hours before OpenAI signed that agreement, The US government labeled Anthropic, its direct rival, a “supply chain risk” for refusing to sign under those same conditions. Altman went to put out the fire just as someone accused him of setting it. Between the lines. Altman’s speech rests on a premise that must be monitored: that a democratically elected government must always prevail over unelected private companies. It is a philosophically reasonable position, but he applies it selectively. Altman acknowledged that the deal “was rushed and the picture is not good,” and that OpenAI moved quickly to “de-escalate” tension between the Pentagon and industry. In other words, your company made a unilateral strategic decision about how the entire AI industry should relate to the military establishment. That doesn’t exactly sound like institutional deference. The contrast. Anthropic opted for something different: requiring explicit safeguards against the use of its AI for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons. But the government penalized her. OpenAI accepted a more ambiguous formula (“for all legal uses”) and won the contract. Various OpenAI employees signed a letter supporting Anthropic’s position. Claude became the most downloaded free application in the App Store that weekend from Apple, precisely surpassing ChatGPT. The market also has opinions. Yes, but. It’s fair to admit that Altman’s position has some internal logic: If AI is going to be integrated into military systems anyway, it may be preferable that it do so under negotiated conditions rather than under coercion. And he’s right about one thing: The labeling of Anthropic as a supply chain risk, a tool intended for hostile foreign suppliers, applied to an American AI security company is, in his own words, “an extremely frightening precedent.” The big question. Who really decides how AI is used in military contexts? The companies that build it, the governments that hire it, or the engineers who design it and who are increasingly organized to influence those decisions? Altman says he believes in the democratic process. But OpenAI negotiated privately, signed privately, and made only a fraction of the contract public. Democratic transparency starts there. In Xataka | Anthropic has become the Apple of our era and OpenAI our Microsoft: a story of love and hate Featured image | Xataka

features, price and technical sheet

Although they already gave a small preview at MWC 2026, it was not until today that Nothing has decided to announce its new batch of smartphones: the Nothing Phone (4a) and Phone (4a) Pro. They are two mid-range terminals that, preserving the design language of the brand that we already know, evolve in materials, colors and specifications to try to differentiate themselves in their price range. The standard model can be reserved from today and its price starts at 349 euros, although it will not be launched until March 13. Reservations for the Pro model, meanwhile, will open on March 13 and the launch will occur at the end of the month, on March 27. The price will start at 479 euros. That said, and with the introductions already made, let’s get to know them a little better. Data sheet of the Nothing Phone (4a) and Phone (4a) Pro nothing phone (4a) nothing Phone (4a) pro dimensions and weight 163.95 x 77.57 x 8.55mm 204.5 grams 163.66 x 76.62 x 7.95mm 210 grams screen 6.78-inch LTPS AMOLED FullHD+ resolution (1,224 x 2,720 pixels) 440 dpi 10-bit color Adaptive refresh rate: 30-120 Hz Touch sampling: up to 2,500 Hz PWM Dimming: 2,160Hz Brightness: 800 nits Maximum brightness: 1,600 nits Peak brightness: 4,500 nits Gorilla Glass 7i 6.83-inch LTPS AMOLED FullHD+ resolution (1,260 x 2,800 pixels) 440 dpi 10-bit color Adaptive refresh rate: 30-144 Hz Touch sampling: up to 2,500 Hz PWM Dimming: 2,160Hz Brightness: 800 nits Maximum brightness: 1,600 nits Peak brightness: 5,000 nits Gorilla Glass 7i processor Qualcomm Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 Qualcomm Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 ram memory 8/12GB LPDDR4x 8/12GB LPDDR5x internal storage 125/256GB UFS 3.1 128/256 GB UFS 3.1 REAR CAMERA Wide 50 MP f/1.88, OIS+EIS, PDAF Wide angle 8 MP, f/2.2, FOV 120º 50 MP periscope, x3.5 optical zoom, f/2.88, OIS+EIS, x70 digital zoom 4K Video@30 FPS Wide-angle 50 MP f/1.88, OIS+EIS, 2×2 OCL PDAF Wide angle 8 MP, f/2.2, FOV 120º 50 MP periscope, x3.5 optical zoom, f/2.88, OIS+EIS, x140 digital zoom 4K Video@30 FPS FRONT CAMERA 32MP, f/2.2 32MP, f/2.2 BATTERY 5,080mAh 50W fast charging 5,080mAh 50W fast charging Reverse wireless charging: 7.5W OPERATING SYSTEM Android 16 with Nothing OS 4.1 3 years of major updates 6 years of security patches Android 16 with Nothing OS 4.1 3 years of major updates 6 years of security patches CONNECTIVITY Wi-Fi 6 5G NSA/SA Dual SIM NFC Bluetooth 5.4 SPF USB type C 360ª antenna Wi-Fi 6 5G NSA/SA Dual SIM NFC Bluetooth 5.4 SPF USB type C 360ª antenna others Glyph Bar (63 mini LEDs) Fingerprint sensor on screen Stereo speakers IP64 resistance Submersible (20 minutes at 25 cm) Essential AI Tools Glyph Matrix (137 mini LEDs) Fingerprint sensor on screen Stereo speakers IP64 resistance Submersible (20 minutes at 25 cm) Essential AI Tools price From 349 euros From 479 euros As familiar as it is different (and now in metal) Nothing Phone (4a) | Image: Nothing If Nothing has accustomed us to anything, it is making devices that have little or nothing to do with those we see in other brands, at least in terms of design. Their new terminals repeat the move seen in previous years, but it is clear that they are radically different from each other. In size, thickness and weight the difference is not that much, but in finishes they could not be more different. He Nothing Phone (4a) It retains the transparent design and a top camera module, now more centered. The back is made of glass and, in the upper right area, the Glyph Bar. This light bar consists of 63 mini-LEDs spread over seven zones and serves as a progress indicator, fill light on the camera or notification alert. Of course, the SDK is open so that developers can do their thing and squeeze even more into their apps. Nothing Phone (4a) Pro | Image: Nothing The Nothing Phone (4a) Pro is totally different. The company has opted for a daring metal unibody structure with flat surfaces and a thickness of 7.95 millimeters, making it the thinnest Nothing mobile to date. On the right side we have the Glyph Matrix, a system of 137 individually configurable mini-LEDs that reach a brightness of 3,000 nits. It has fewer LEDs than the Nothing Phone (3), which is still the company’s high-end, but it occupies a 57% larger area. When it comes to screens, the only difference is the size. The one on the Nothing Phone (4a) Pro is somewhat larger, but in general terms they are almost identical. They share AMOLED LTPS technologythe density of pixels per inch, almost almost the resolution, the touch sampling rate… Now, the Phone (4a) Pro has a slightly higher peak brightness and the refresh rate is 144 Hz instead of 120 Hz. A very similar engine Nothing Phone (4a) | Image: Nothing Both devices share chipset: the Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 from Qualcomm. On paper, performance should be very similar on both. Now, there is a substantial difference and that is that the Nothing Phone (4a) mounts LPDDR4x RAM memorywhile his older brother rides LPDDR5x RAM memory. It is somewhat faster and, although on a day-to-day basis the difference should not be excessively noticeable, it should be appreciated in the long term. The internal storage is the same: 128 or 256 GB with UFS 3.1 technology. It is not the fastest or the latest available on the market, but it is more than enough for a terminal in this price range and for everyday use. Nothing Phone (4a) Pro | Image: Nothing As far as software is concerned, Android 16 with Nothing OS 4.1three-year warranty for major updates and six years for security patches. They also incorporate Nothing AI, the suite of artificial intelligence tools more focused on productivity than creativity. The big news, by the way, is support for the cloud, so now we can access what we save in Essential Space from any device. Before talking about the camera, it … Read more

Sony closes its games to PC and Capcom confirms that half of its sales come from there. A contradiction with a reason: Playstation 6

Sony has decided that titles like ‘Ghost of Yotei’ will not come to PC, ending six years of multiplatform strategy. The twist is striking for the moment: Capcom has just confirmed that 50% of its sales already come from the PCand expects that number to continue growing. Two giants of the industry from Japan, two radically opposite bets on where the future of the business lies. The breakup. After weeks of rumors in that direction, Bloomberg confirmed that Sony has canceled plans to bring its big single-player exclusives to PC. TO ‘Ghost of Yotei‘, one of the most celebrated PlayStation releases in 2025, are joined by ‘Saro’, the next Housemarque game. The multiplatform experiment that Sony started in 2020 with ‘Horizon Zero Dawn‘It has lasted six years. The withdrawal is not total. According to sources consulted by Bloomberg, games as a service (the imminent ‘Marathon’, ‘Marvel Tokon’ or ‘Horizon: Hunter’s Gathering’) will maintain a multi-platform launch, because their business model depends on building player bases as wide as possible. ‘Death Stranding 2: On the Beach’ and ‘Kena: Scars of Kosmora’ will continue to be ported to PC this year, as they are titles from third-party developers published under the PlayStation umbrella. Calm rhythm. Sony’s release rate on Steam was never that of a furious competitor: the titles arrived between one and three years after their console debut, which meant that the ports had to compete against previous versions that had already suffered price discounts, to which was added the incessant pace of new releases for PC. These are some of the reasons why Sony may the bills didn’t work out: ‘Ghost of Tsushima’ reached a peak of 77,000 simultaneous players, but ‘Horizon Forbidden West’ and ‘The Last of Us Part II Remastered’ did not exceed 40,000 and 30,000 respectively. To retreat. This leaves some decisions made by Sony recently up in the air: in 2021 acquired Nixxes Softwarea Dutch studio specialized in porting games to PC (‘Tomb Raider’ trilogy, ‘Deus Ex: Mankind Divided’), and it is not clear what its future will be with this new strategy. Furthermore, on the 19th Bluepoint Games closedthe studio responsible for the remakes of ‘Demon’s Souls’ and ‘Shadow of the Colossus’, with around 70 employees affected. Sony think tank CEO Hermen Hulst spoke internally of an “increasingly challenging industry environment”, with rising development costs and slowing growth. Bluepoint had been working on a ‘God of War’ project in the form of a game as a service. Print money. In February 2025, Shuhei Yoshida, former president of PlayStation Studios, described the strategy of bringing games to Steam as something which is similar to “printing money” because the cost of a port is only a fraction of that of developing an original game. Why the change in strategy? PC numbers weren’t bad in absolute terms: Sony’s five best-selling titles on Steam together they surpassed 43 million copies and generated more than $1.2 billion in gross revenue for the company. The problem may well be the value they subtract from the hardware: they generate income but not a loyalty to the ecosystembecause a PC gamer does not need to buy a Playstation console. In the end, as Bloomberg pointed out, PC ports represent less than 2% of Sony’s total annual revenue. And there is something else: apparentlythere is a real concern about the design of the next xboxwhose architecture is closer to a Windows PC than to a conventional console, with the possibility of supporting multiple stores, including Steam. The PlayStation exclusives available on Steam could run perfectly on an Xbox, which would make Sony investing money to literally benefit its most direct competitor. Capcom prefers the PC. A day before Bloomberg published Sony’s new policy, Capcom released the Q&A transcript of its fiscal third-quarter results. An investor asked about the PC strategy regarding ‘Resident Evil Requiem‘ and its technical commitment to that platform. The company’s response was that the PC already represents approximately 50% of the total units sold for Capcom, and the internal expectation is that that figure will continue to grow. Already in October 2021, the company’s COO Haruhiro Tsujimoto stated in an interview that the company’s goal was that the PC became its main platform and that the proportion of sales between console and PC will reach 50-50 in 2022 or 2023. The prediction has been fulfilled with only a couple of years of delay. Revenue generated via Steam grew by 61.1% between April 2024 and March 2025 and in that same period PlayStation’s share of Capcom’s total revenue fell below 10%. The differences. Of course, there are differences to take into account between Capcom and Sony. Capcom has no hardware to sell, and its only incentive is to maximize the distribution of its software catalog across all platforms. Sony, on the other hand, manages a complete ecosystem that includes a console, digital store, subscription and accessories, and each decision has to be measured not only in direct sales of that title but in the impact on the value of the hardware and loyalty to the ecosystem. They are different business structures. Things that happen. All this happens the same year that Valve announces its new Steam Machine, in which the ROG Ally with branding from xbox It corroborates after the Steam Deck that the power of PC hardware can reach the living room, and that Microsoft officially embraces the idea that its games do not need an Xbox to be played. What justifies buying a dedicated console in 2026? Sony clearly focuses its sights on the most successful name in the industry at the moment: Nintendo. If you have to sell hardware, the key is exclusivity and making your object essential. It only remains to be seen if Playstation 6 will be so essential. In Xataka | Playstation 6: all the information we know (or think we know) so far

“Life begins on the other side of despair”

It doesn’t matter where you are from, how old you are, what you do or what you entertain yourself with. It almost doesn’t matter how you think. Most likely the word “despair” causes you an automatic rejection. Normal, right? In life there are good sensations, others that are debatable, and there are those that are undesirable no matter how you look at them. Despair, anguish, is part of the latter because no one in their right mind would choose despair over hope. No? If we are clear about the above, why the hell in 1943 did the philosopher Jean-Paul Sartreone of the most prestigious minds of the 20th century, had Orestes pronounce the next words in his theater work The flies? “Human life begins on the other side of despair.” The question is timely because, unlike what happens in most literary works, here it does not seem that it is the character who speaks to us. If we take into account Sartre’s philosophy, in this case it is not unreasonable to think that it’s himself who moves Orestes’ lips to express his opinion. Did Sartre really believe that ‘despair’ is the door to life? Isn’t that a discouraging and gloomy panorama? Sartre and existentialism Before talking about how Sartre thought, it is worth knowing who Sartre was, one of the lighthouses of Western philosophy of the 20th century. Thinker, novelist, playwright, critic and political activist, Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980) is remembered above all for being one of the great exponents of existentialism. Without it it is difficult to understand the intellectual panorama of 20th century Europe and figures of the stature of Soren Kierkegaard, Lev Chestov, Albert Camus either Martin Heidegger. Although its seams are wide and there are important differences between authors, basically existentialism as conceived by Sartre (atheistic existentialism) is based on a premise: humans are born without a predefined purpose. We are not toasters, cars or TVs, objects created based on a concept and with a specific purpose. Nor are we the work of a superior “craftsman.” Unlike what happens with what we make as men, objects in which the “essence” is prior to the “existence”, in our case it is the existence that precedes the essence. What does that mean? “That man begins by existing, finds himself, emerges in the world, and then defines himself,” the French thinker clarifies in one of his key works, Existentialism is a humanism. “Man, as the existentialist conceives him, if he is not definable, it is because he begins by being nothing. He will only be later, and he will be as he has been made. Thus, then, there is no human nature, because there is no God to conceive it,” Sartre continuesand insists: “Man is nothing other than what he makes himself”, a creature “condemned to be free.” We have not chosen to be here. We have not created ourselves. And yet we are responsible for everything we do. It is not lost on Sartre that this scenario can lead to “anguish”, a feeling of helplessness and despair. He is not the only philosopher who addresses the topic (Heidegger and Kierkegaard also did), although it is true that the Frenchman’s work helps us understand how important sensation is. for him Anguish is nothing other than “the awareness of being one’s own future in the way of not being one”, an overwhelming feeling in the face of the range of possibilities that are open to man, radical freedom and lack of answers. This approach leaves behind an idea that is as fascinating as it is overwhelming: man is born with a huge challenge aheadthe challenge of living authentically, assuming your freedom, choosing your course, giving meaning to yourself and making decisions that will have consequences for your entire environment. There is no destination. There are no excuses. It depends on us. “Man will only be afterwards and will be as he has been made. It is nothing other than what he makes himself. If it precedes the essence, man is responsible for what he is”, warns us. “(Fyodor) Dostoyevsky writes: ‘If God did not exist, everything would be permitted.’ This is the starting point of existentialism. In fact, everything is permitted if God does not exist and, consequently, man is abandoned, because he finds neither in himself nor outside himself a possibility of clinging. “First of all, it finds no excuses. If existence precedes essence, the reference to a given and fixed human nature can never be explained. In other words, there is no determinism, man is free, freedom.” “The first step of existentialism is to put every man in possession of what he is and to place upon him the total responsibility for his existence. And when we say that man is responsible for himself, we do not mean that man is responsible for his strict individuality, but that he is responsible for all men,” Sartre continues. Understanding this enormous responsibility and all its implications generates anxiety, but that has no why be negative. The reason? As Orestes proclaims in his dialogue of the The flies This hopelessness does not have to be frustrating or plunge us into inaction. On the contrary. “It is the very condition of their action because this means that they face a plurality of possibilities and, when they choose one, they realize that it only has value because it has been chosen,” illustrates the philosopher, drawing a parallel with the anguish that a general feels when he decides something that will affect the lives of his soldiers. “existentialism is an optimism, a doctrine of action,” claims Sartre, who ends his essay with a warning: those who use despair to attack it do so by “confusing their own feeling with ours.” It may sound like an old-fashioned lesson (Sartre died in 1980), but his words resonate strongly in an era in which we live hyperconnected, among related ephemera in which the need to search for meaning, identity and authenticity is especially felt. From the Paris … Read more

Epic Games has won. Fortnite will return to the Play Store and developer commissions will be lower than ever

It’s been almost six years since it started the war between Epic Games and Google. A battle in which the American court ended up determining that the Google Play Store it was a monopolyand in which the company was forced to change its commission system and policy with third-party stores. Today, we know exactly what those changes will look like. A new era. We don’t say it, Google says it in its publication titled “A new era for choice and openness.” The lawsuits with Epic Games have forced the company to take a new directionmaking its commission system more flexible and allowing third-party developers to implement their own stores. The change in commissions. Google will eliminate its 30% commissions and move to a new 20% one. This rate refers to the commission charged by the application store when a user purchases something within an app (in app purchase). New developers who join the new Google programs will be able to reduce this commission up to 15%. These figures say goodbye to the 30% rate that giants like Epic Games described it as abusiveand which were modified by judicial order of the US Supreme Court. Third party stores. Epic Games had to launch your Epic Games Store outside of Google Play to avoid commissions, something that will no longer be necessary. Just like Apple had to do, Google will have to facilitate the installation process of third-party stores. As they have shown in their own publication, there will be an interface on Android dedicated to third-party application stores, so that users who download them have a more simplified and unified installation flow. This interface will be available to all developers who want to join the program. Otherwise, we will continue to be able to install them like any other APK. The before and after. The Google/Epic case marks a before and after: it is a warning to the rest of the giants. The PC platform Steam charges a 30% commission on game sales and microtransactions. Same figure that Sony charges developers on the PlayStation Store. For years, 30% became the name of large stores, but European regulatory pressures and the antitrust trials held in the US are the first blow to this wall of 30. In Xataka | Obtainium: what it is and how this alternative application store to the Google Play Store on Android works

Having a mini PC connected to the TV is something I have always wanted. This has everything I’m looking for at a reasonable price (for now)

Since I bought the Mac mini M4 I put aside my previous computer, a fairly large piece of equipment that at specific times I have connected to the television to play or simply to browse the Internet without having to use my cell phone or sit at the desk. That computer is not exactly small and I prefer to avoid using it in the television area because, basically, it does not fit. To this end, I have been considering buying a mini PC for a few weeks, and the Blackview MP60 It is one of the ones that interests me the most right now. It can be found at PcComponentes for a price of 295 euros. The price could vary. We earn commission from these links A mini PC to work or as a multimedia center The RAM memory crisis has affected many devices, and the Blackview MP60 is no exception. It has risen in price in recent months, but it is still interesting for everything it offers in terms of hardware and software, since it comes with Windows 11 Pro preinstalledwhich prevents us from having to install it ourselves. Taking into account how much I liked the format of the Mac mini M4, I am interested (and not a little) in having a similar computer for how multimedia center on the tvwhether to watch content from streaming platforms or simply to browse the Internet, so I take advantage of the fact that I bought the keyboard a while ago Logitech K400 for TV and I have a mouse Logitech MX Vertical. At the hardware level, it comes with an Intel Celeron N150 processor, which is normal for computers at this price. But it also includes 16 GB of RAM (DDR4) and 512 GB of internal storage, more than enough for the use I would give it. It is also worth mentioning that it comes with four USB ports, a pair of HDMI 1.4, an Ethernet port and another 3.5 mm Jack. Of course, seeing that the price of this mini PC has risen a little in recent months, it is possible that it will continue to do so in the coming weeks, so in that case it may not be such an attractive purchase. The RAM that has increased the most in price is DDR5, although DDR4 has not been far behind. This entire mini PC is practically the same as RAM alone, or even cheaper. For work or as a multimedia center still maintains a fairly reasonable priceat least taking into account the moment we are experiencing with the price of RAM. ⚡ IN SUMMARY: Blackview MP60 ✅ THE BEST It comes well equipped: Unless we want to use it more demandingly, it is ideal for working from the sofa or as a multimedia center to watch movies and series or surf the Internet. Its format: It is small, so it is interesting to have it placed next to the television. ❌ THE WORST Its price: The RAM memory crisis is affecting the price of many devices, and this mini PC has not been spared. 💡 BUY IT IF… You are looking for a good mini PC to work with or as a multimedia center taking into account that the price has increased, but may increase further in the coming weeks. ⛔ DON’T BUY IT IF… You want a more powerful device that allows you to run demanding apps or play games sporadically. You may also be interested ACEMAGIC Matrix Mini M1 Mini PC, Windows 11 Pro, AMD Ryzen 7 6800H (8C/16T, up to 4.7 GHz), Mini Computer with 32 GB LPDDR5 1TB M.2 SSD, Triple 4K Screen, WiFi 6/BT 5.2 for Games and Office The price could vary. We earn commission from these links ACEMAGIC Kron Mini K1 Mini PC, Windows 11 Pro, AMD Ryzen 5 7430U (6C/12T, up to 4.3 GHz), Mini Desktop Computers 16GB RAM DDR4 512GB M.2 2280 SSD, BT 5.2/WiFi 6/for Office, Small Computer 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 | Laura LopezBlackview In Xataka | What mouse do Xataka editors use? 13 recommended mice for work and play In Xataka | What keyboard do Xataka editors use: 15 recommended keyboards for productivity, writing and playing

news and everything that changes in ChatGPT with the new version of its artificial intelligence model

Let’s tell you what are the news GPT 5.3 Instantthe new version of the model artificial intelligence of ChatGPT. Therefore, we are going to give you a list of the main changes in this version, so that you know the improvements and what changes from now on. As it is understandable that you are a little confused with the numbers, I can tell you that yes, there was already a version of GPT-5.3 that was released in February. It was about GPT-5.3 Codexcreated to write programming code. And on March 3 it was launched the GPT‑5.3 Instant conversational variantwhich is used when he responds to you using text in a conversation. What’s new in GPT 5.3 Instant Next, we are going to give you a list with the main news that brings this new version of the OpenAI artificial intelligence model. We are going to do it in list format with a brief explanation of each news so that it is easier to understand. Improvements in tone and conversational style: OpenAI admits that GPT-5.2 could sound a bit overbearing or make unwarranted assumptions about user intent or emotions. Now, GPT-5.3 offers a more focused and natural tone, with fewer proclamations and filler phrases, while maintaining the bot’s personality. The tone can still be customized from the settings. Less hallucinations in the answers: GPT-5.3 has reduced hallucinations when searching online by 22.5% to 26.8%, and by 9.6% to 19.7% when relying on your knowledge base. Less censoring of responses: ChatGPT was having trouble rejecting questions that could be safely answered, being overly cautious with GPT-5.2 Unnecessary rejections are now reduced. Fewer moralizing warnings: In the preambles of answers, before telling you what you know, GPT-5.3 will moderate overly defensive and moralizing preambles. Come on, they won’t want to educate you so much, and will focus more on your question without explaining their safety limits. Improve the quality of responses with online information: This new version more effectively balances the information you have to search for on the Internet with your knowledge base and reasoning. So instead of simply summarizing what you find on the web, you first use your own understanding to contextualize recent news. This means that, by focusing less on the web, it does not generate such long lists of links. Best creative writing: Allows you to produce more expressive, imaginative and immersive texts. This way you can better switch between practical tasks and expressive writing without losing clarity and coherence. There is still work to do: OpenAI admits that there are still improvements to be made, and that for future versions they will improve the responses in languages ​​other than English, and also the tone of the responses. In Xataka Basics | ChatGPT apps: what they are and how to use them to give ChatGPT more features

The war in Iran is going to repeat a suicidal scenario from 1980. But with drones and kamikaze boats in the most fearsome point on the planet

At first glance it is just a strip of water between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula, but its importance it’s huge. The Strait of Hormuz is one of the few places on the planet where global trade it literally depends of a maritime corridor just a few kilometers wide. Every day dozens of supertankers and monster container ships pass through it, connecting the Middle East. with the rest of the planeta constant choreography that moves energy, raw materials and essential products on a global scale. Therefore, when something happens there, the effect is greatly felt. beyond the Gulf. The most dangerous bottleneck on the planet. As we said, the Strait of Hormuz is one of the most critical geographical points of the world economic system and also one of the most vulnerable. At its narrowest point it barely reaches 33 kilometers wide and thousands of ships pass through it every month connecting the Persian Gulf with the rest of the planet. Through this maritime strip it circulates around a fifth of oil that is traded in the world, large volumes of liquefied natural gas and an essential part of the industrial raw materials that sustain the global economy. But its importance goes beyond energy: it is also a key artery for trade in fertilizers and chemicals that end up directly influencing food production. When this route is interrupted, not only are the energy markets altered, the entire chain that connects agricultural fields, the chemical industry and supermarkets is shaken. War stops traffic. The military escalation between the United States, Israel and Iran has brought that critical point to the brink of a historic crisis. Attacks on oil tankers and commercial vessels, along with direct warnings from Tehran to shipping companies, have caused traffic through the strait to reduce. almost to zero in matter of days. Several vessels have been hit by projectiles or dronessome energy facilities in Gulf countries have been attacked and oil prices have reacted immediately with strong rises. Shipping companies and insurers have begun to cancel policies or dramatically raise war insurance costs, as some ships attempt to cross the zone with their location systems turned off to reduce the probability of being identified as a target. Washington’s response and the convoys. Faced with the risk that the global energy flow will be blocked, the United States has raised an extraordinary measure: escort oil tankers and commercial vessels with the US Navy and also offer financial guarantees and political insurance to reassure shipping companies. The idea seeks to avoid a global energy shock, but it implies send warships directly to the most dangerous area of ​​the Gulf. Organizing maritime convoys is a complex operation that requires destroyers, aircraft and military resources that could not be used in other missions. Furthermore, even with an escort, experts remember that ships would continue to navigate within an extremely hostile space, where reaction times to attacks can be reduced to minutes. The ghost of the eighties. I was counting this morning the financial times that the situation inevitably reminds one of the most tense episodes of the Cold War in the Middle East: the so-called “tanker war” which developed during the conflict between Iran and Iraq in the 1980s. So both countries They systematically attacked maritime traffic in the Gulf with missiles, naval mines and air strikes. A kamikaze battle involving more than four hundred commercial ships were damaged or sunk and the United States deployed dozens of ships to escort convoys and protect oil tankers. Still, the risk it was huge: American frigates were severely damaged by mines and missiles and dozens of sailors were killed. That crisis demonstrated the extent to which a regional conflict could put global trade in check. The difference: drones and kamikaze boats. The war in Iran is about to end repeat the scenario suicide bombing of 1980, but with a difference: now there are drones and kamikaze boats at the most fearsome point for the planet. From then until now the Iranian arsenal has evolved radically and today it combines long-range anti-ship missiles, thousands of cruise shellsarmed drones, diesel submarines, modern naval mines and fast vessels capable of swarming attacks. Added to this are unmanned surface vehicles, small ships loaded with explosives that hit the hulls of ships at the waterline, causing flooding in the engine room and rapid sinking. In a strait “so narrow” and close to the Iranian coast, these systems offer Tehran a obvious tactical advantage. An economic weapon to paralyze everything. Even without completely blocking the passage, the simple risk of attacks can paralyze maritime traffic. Recent history of the red seawhere attacks by militias allied with Iran diverted trade routes for months, shows that it only takes a few incidents to skyrocket shipping costs and force shipping companies to look for much longer alternative routes. In Hormuz the effect would be much greater because it is of the natural exit of the energy production of the entire Gulf. Tanker freight rates have already skyrocketed and any sign of mines or new attacks could double shipping prices again. A global pulse with unpredictable consequences. Close Hormuz also has a cost for Iranwhose economy depends largely on exporting its own oil, especially to China. However, the strategic logic of the conflict could push Tehran to use the strait as an economic lever to pressure Washington and its allies. In any case, the longer the war continues, the greater the temptation on both sides to use energy as a weapon. In that scenario, the world could face a perfect storm: skyrocketing oil, scarce fertilizers and more expensive food. All concentrated in a strait just a few kilometers wide that once again becomes the most fragile point in the global economic system. Image | eutrophication&hypoxiaNZ Defense Force, National Museum of the US Navy In Xataka | Shahed drones are spreading terror in the Gulf. Ukraine has offered the solution, and the price to pay has a name In Xataka | Spain has … Read more

evolution made them hypercompetitive

Being left-handed is not the most common, but approximately 10.6% of the population world is left-handed. From a purely evolutionary point of view, this has always represented a puzzle for biologists, since, if being right-handed is the norm and facilitates cooperation and the use of standardized tools for everyone, a compelling question arises: why has natural selection not eradicated left-handedness over the millennia? Investigating. The answer to this question seems to be deeply rooted in our competitive nature. At least this is what a study published in mid-Februarywhich gives us more light on this enigma, and confirms that left-handers are much more competitive on a psychological and evolutionary level. In the mind. The research team in this case thoroughly analyzed the relationship between manual lateralitysex and competitiveness. And to do this, they evaluated more than 1,100 online surveys in which the Laterality Quotient was calculated, which measures the preference for using one side of the body, and they crossed it with tests such as the 9-Hole Peg which measures manual dexterity. The results. It was clearly seen that left-handers show significantly higher levels of “hypercompetitiveness.” In addition, they have a lower tendency to avoid competition due to anxiety and, interestingly, the study showed that this thirst for victory is not correlated with greater pure physical skill, but is a deeply psychological trait. What does it mean? The study in this case reinforces a biological theory that was already proposed: the Evolutionarily Stable Strategy. In this case they pointed out that human evolution is a constant tug-of-war between cooperation and competition within a species. If we transfer it to the population level, the right-handed majority guarantees social cooperation and standardization to be able to use the same tools for everyone. However, in a world where everyone competes under the same rules, being “different” grants an invaluable tactical advantage, something known as the ‘fighting hypothesis’. In this way, being a minority of 10%, left-handers enjoy a surprise effect in hand-to-hand combat, since right-handers are not used to defending themselves from attacks coming from the left side. An advantage. Already a study from 2019 with more than 13,800 boxers and MMA fighters confirmed that left-handers, both men and women, won a significant percentage of fights. The same thing happens in soccer, where being left-footed is considered a tactical and technical advantage by offering this surprise factor against the rival, who a shot with the other leg is not expected which he is used to seeing because most footballers are right-handed. In addition, the brain symmetry of left-handers usually facilitates control of both legs. To survive. In this way, science suggests that evolution has not only given left-handers an advantage based on the surprise effect, but has also shaped their psychological profile so that they seek and do not fear those competitive scenarios where they have the chance to win. Left-handedness, therefore, is far from being a simple anomaly or a “flaw” of the evolutionary system, but is a mechanism perfectly balanced by nature. In Xataka | If the question is “who are the best human beings at the Olympics”, the answer is simple: left-handed people

Two decades ago, dogs flooded Spain with souped-up motorcycles. Today, they sell them for a fortune

If you know what a Yamaha Joga Aerox or one Piaggio ZipI’m very sorry: you are already old. Between the 90s and 2000s, young Spaniards could obtain their moped license from the age of 14, and the 49cc scooter became an object of worship… and souped-up. With the tightening of European regulations, this type of motorcycle has practically stopped being sold. But there are those who are making a killing on second-hand platforms. The fall of the 49cc. The moped market has completely changed. At the end of the 2000s, nearly 200,000 units were sold per year. Two decades later, sales fell more than 90%. Currently, mopeds represent a minimal part of the market: in Spain there are barely more than 20,000 registrations per year, while 125 cc motorcycles dominate sales thanks to the fact that they can be driven with a car license. The fall of the 49cc coincided with key factors such as: The 49cc fever. The thunderous and (for many) unpleasant hum of this type of motorcycle was no coincidence. Preparations were the order of the day: exhaust, cylinder, variator… Mopeds with a tiny engine surpassed many of the current 125cc scooters in performance. In fact, the homologation regulations on paper prevented these mopeds from exceeding 45km/h. The reality? Even the slowest one could double this figure straight out of the factory. It was enough to remove some stops in a matter of minutes, and if we dared to carry out a simple preparation, it was easy to make them touch (or exceed) 100km/h. The pasta. A classic like the Yamaha Jog cost just over 2,000 euros in 2005. 20 years later, it is easy to find units in good condition on Wallapop from 1,200 euros to more than 2,500. Of course, prepared to the brim. In fact, it is practically impossible to find a moped of this style that is not souped up. A safer time. Between the 90s and 2000s, it was common to see minors driving this type of motorcycle. The accident rate per kilometer was very high, and the risk multiplied compared to adults on motorcycles with larger displacements. Today the panorama is very different. The 50 cc has been relegated to a niche, the 125 cc dominates the urban market and electric scooters are beginning to gain ground. But for an entire generation, the metallic sound of a Jog or an Aerox remains the soundtrack of adolescence. In Xataka | I was about to buy the best-selling Chinese motorcycle in Spain. Until I read the fine print

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