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TheWild ™

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  1. VOTED✔️
  2. Contra! Low activity Good Luck !!
  3. VOTED✔️
  4. Contra! Low activity Good Luck !!
  5. Live Performance Title: Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars - Die With A Smile (Live in Las Vegas) Signer Name: Gaga Live Performance Location: Lady Official YouTube Link:
  6. Nick Movie: Ninja Time: 2024 Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: None Duration of the movie: 1h 26m Trailer:
  7. Senior Biden White House aides, administration officials and prominent defense attorneys in Washington, DC, are discussing potential preemptive pardons or legal aid for people who might be targeted for prosecution by President-elect Donald Trump after he retakes power, multiple sources told CNN. Reports of these conversations have captured the attention of Trump’s legal advisers, who, according to a source familiar with their strategy, believe President Joe Biden would be setting a new precedent in terms of the scope of pardons that they could take advantage of, down the line, to help their own allies. Biden’s senior aides inside the White House have been deliberating for weeks about the possibility of issuing preemptive pardons, according to the sources familiar with the discussions. The move, which would cover people who haven’t ever been formally accused of any crimes, would be an extraordinary step and shows the grave concerns many Democrats have that Trump will prosecute a range of figures that he considers to be his enemies. Trump has publicly called for the jailing of people like Republican former Rep. Liz Cheney, who served as vice chair of the House select committee that investigated the January 6, 2021, US Capitol attack, as well as special counsel Jack Smith, who brought federal criminal cases against Trump. One former senior White House official said aides inside the White House and across various federal agencies are intensely worried about the possibility that the incoming Trump administration will prosecute anyone deemed as having antagonized the president-elect. Additionally, several prominent white-collar lawyers across Washington have fielded calls in recent weeks from government officials, including investigators from Smith’s office, who are concerned they could be targeted by the incoming Trump administration. Biden and his top aides view Trump’s public threats – particularly against current and former government officials – as unprecedented, and some believe that it would be reckless and irresponsible for Biden to leave office without granting preemptive pardons. “You have got (an incoming) president that has basically said he’s going to go after all these people,” a source familiar with the discussions told CNN. “Why not do it?” A White House spokesperson declined to comment. Possible legal defense funds According to Politico, which first reported on the internal debate, the discussions are being led by White House counsel Ed Siskel and other senior aides to the president, including chief of staff Jeff Zients. The former White House official who spoke to CNN, who is intimately familiar with the workings of the White House counsel’s office, said it would be typical for Siskel and his team to first put together a detailed memo to be presented to Biden. In that situation, that memo would include a list of individuals that Biden might consider pardoning preemptively, the context about any prior legal precedent, and a discussion of the wide range of potential ramifications if the president does move forward with these pardons. The calls among worried government officials and top white-collar defense lawyers in DC, appear, at this point, to be precautionary. One private attorney told CNN that they’re “feeling out what they should do if something happens” once Trump takes over. A spokesman for Smith’s special counsel office declined to comment on whether he would seek a preemptive pardon. CNN previously reported that Smith intends to step down before Trump takes office, instead of being fired, as the president-elect has pledged to do. As Democrats brace for the political and legal scrutiny that could come from the new president, his administration, and the GOP-run Congress, one significant concern for many current and former administration officials is the possibility of mounting legal bills. Multiple sources said there have been discussions about setting up legal funds to help support those who would not be able to afford thousands of dollars in lawyers’ fees. Some of the private practice bar have discussed if influential white-collar practices could work together to help career Justice Department workers – and others who are exiting the federal workforce – to possibly provide them low-cost or pro-bono representation. And at least one progressive group is working on assembling resources – such as lawyers, security experts and communications professionals – who could help government officials placed under investigation during the Trump years, some of the people familiar with the discussions said. Emboldening Trump? A source familiar with Trump legal strategy says his team believes Biden’s pardon of his son Hunter has set a new precedent for presidents to issue expansive pardons to their children – and this could be something Trump chooses to do before he leaves office. The Hunter Biden pardon was notable for not only forgiving the crimes in his tax and gun indictments, but also for protecting him from being charged with any offense he “may have committed or taken part in” between January 2014 and December 2024. There’s also the president’s brother James Biden, who hasn’t faced charges but whose overseas business dealings attracted intense scrutiny from congressional Republicans. Several GOP-run House committees urged the Justice Department to prosecute James Biden in connection with lying to Congress. (He denies all wrongdoing and declined to comment for this story.) If Biden goes even further and grants preemptive pardons to an expansive list of individuals, Trump’s team believes that move would also create a new precedent and give Trump political cover to do the same for his allies, according to the source. CNN reported in 2021 that before Trump left office during his first term, he considered – but did not grant – preemptive pardons for family members, political allies, his personal attorneys, and even for himself, including in the wake of the January 6 insurrection. Attorneys across the political spectrum have raised concerns about blanket pardons to protect against future investigations or prosecution. “It’s just such a different use of the pardon power,” said Neil Eggleston, former White House counsel to President Barack Obama. “You would create the beginning of a tit for tat where, when any administration is over, you just pardon everybody.” Presidential pardons protect against federal Justice Department prosecutions, but do not shield individuals from state-level criminal cases or congressional investigations. While Trump has publicly said he wants his Justice Department to go after his perceived adversaries, the system has built-in checks against abuses of power, such as judges that can throw out charges, grand juries that can refuse to indict, juries that can return “not guilty” verdicts, and other safeguards to protect against purely vindictive prosecutions. Some prominent former Justice Department officials have said they wouldn’t want a preemptive pardon from Biden, because it might imply they’re conceding there was wrongdoing during their work for the federal government, according to a source familiar with their thinking. Trump’s ever-growing enemies list Trump has a well-documented history of pushing – both publicly and privately – for investigations and prosecutions of his political opponents, almost always based on unproven, baseless and conspiracy-tinged allegations about their supposed activities. Many of his recent threats targeted prosecutors who charged him with crimes: Smith, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. He has publicly called for investigations into prominent lawmakers: Cheney and the rest of the January 6 committee members (who he said “should go to jail”), former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (for her supposed “ties to Russia”), Senator-elect Adam Schiff (for his role in the Trump-Ukraine impeachment saga) and a host of other Democratic lawmakers. Still, members of Congress have immunity from the Constitution’s “speech or debate clause” that offers such broad protections for their legislative work that even members of the defunct January 6 committee would be unlikely to take seriously any legal threats. Trump also has said Vice President Kamala Harris “should be … prosecuted” for letting undocumented immigrants into the country. After the election, Trump called for probes of Iowa pollster Ann Selzer (for “election fraud,” by releasing a poll with Harris ahead), and into stock traders who spread “illegal rumors” about his investment in Truth Social. During his first term, some of Trump’s calls for probes were apparently heeded, leading to investigations into 2016 Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, former FBI director James Comey, and former FBI deputy director Andy McCabe, now a CNN contributor. None of them were ever charged with crimes. Some of Trump’s longtime foes who worked on the Russia probe around the 2016 election may not have much legal exposure now because their government service ended so long ago and statutes of limitations may have lapsed. There are plenty of other figures that, despite Trump’s calls, weren’t investigated during his first term, but could be scrutinized when he returns to power: former President Barack Obama (for “treason”), former Secretary of State John Kerry (for his contacts with Iran), and even MSNBC host Joe Scarborough (based on a conspiracy theory that he was possibly able to “get away with murder” after one of his interns died in 2001). Attorneys who might defend top targets have their own fears, too. Representing Trump administration and political officials had largely gone out of fashion for large DC defense firms in recent years, with few willing to take on clients, especially after January 6. The view at Washington’s elite firms – which tend to lean liberal – may be shifting back toward getting involved, but it’s still not clear how much pushback the next Trump presidency may receive from the capital’s powerful law firms, several prominent attorneys told CNN this week. “There could well be a fear now by law firm leaders that if we take on those cases, could we ourselves be targeted?”one white-collar lawyer who regularly represents high-profile political figures told CNN on Thursday. Focus on political pardons angers activists Some liberal-leaning and criminal justice reform groups are pushing Biden to focus his final clemency efforts less on family members, political allies or Trump’s potential targets – and instead to help incarcerated Americans whom they believe deserve relief. One group, FWD.us, is airing TV ads in the Washington, DC, market, pressing Biden to “give people a second chance,” by granting clemency to Americans with “outdated” prison sentences that they argue would be shorter under today’s laws and policies. They’ve pointed to Obama’s record-setting commutations as a model. He reduced the punishments of more than 1,300 convicts, including 500 people serving life sentences. “The thousands of people serving disproportionately long and racially disparate sentences in federal prison have been waiting for relief long before the politics of this particular moment,” Zoë Towns, executive director of FWD.us, said in an email. “It is our hope that whatever comes next includes a robust clemency effort focused on them.” https://edition.cnn.com/2024/12/05/politics/preemptive-pardons-biden-white-house-trump/index.html?iid=cnn_buildContentRecirc_end_recirc
  8. Stellantis has revealed details about its new STLA Large platform, which is expected to underpin the 2025 Dodge Charger and Jeep Wagoneer S EV. The flexible platform can accommodate AWD, FWD, and RWD configurations as well as electric, hybrid, and internal-combustion powertrains. Along with providing up to an estimated 500 miles of range, EV versions of STLA Large are claimed to deliver a zero-to-62-mph time of about 2.0 seconds. Stellantis—the parent company of familiar brands like Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and Ram—today divulged details about its new STLA Large platform. The company said the flexible architecture is expected to underpin upcoming models from Dodge and Jeep that will launch later this year. That implies the electric 2025 Jeep Wagoneer S, which yesterday was confirmed to be arriving in the U.S. this fall. Last week, Dodge released several teaser images of the 2025 Charger on its social media channels, mentioning that it'll be "available late 2024." The timing of those announcements likely isn't coincidental, and that's why today's news about the STLA-L platform provides more details about both the new Charger and Wagoneer S as well as six other unspecified vehicles that will launch globally sometime during the next couple of years. New models from Alfa Romeo, Maserati, and Chrysler will be the first of that bunch. STLA Large Details While STLA Large is an EV-centric platform that's available with either a 400- or 800-volt architecture, Stellantis says it can also accommodate hybrid and internal-combustion powertrains. That corroborates online reports that the new Dodge Charger will be offered not only as an EV, but also with a gas-fed engine—likely a version of the Hurricane twin-turbo 3.0-liter straight-six that's currently capable of producing over 500 horsepower. STLA-L also supports transverse and longitudinal engines layouts and limited-slip differentials. Notably, Stellantis points out that the platform can handle "extreme power that will outperform any of the existing Hellcat V-8s." Considering the most powerful Hellcat engine (found in the Dodge Challenger SRT Demon 170) makes up to 1025 horsepower, we believe that's likely the bogey for the highest-performance version of the new Charger EV. Thanks to its flexible nature, the STLA Large platform offers three different drivetrain configurations, including all-wheel drive, front-wheel drive, and rear-wheel drive. Its wheelbase can be stretched from 113.0 to 121.0 inches. Stellantis says overall lengths range between 187.6 and 201.8 inches; overall widths range from 74.7 to 79.9 inches. The platform's lowest ground clearance is 5.5 inches and the highest is 11.3 inches. For off-road-oriented models like the Jeep, Stellantis says the largest tire diameter that will fit is 32.6 inches. https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a46456020/2025-dodge-charger-jeep-wagoneer-s-stla-large-platform/
  9. Since 2011, she's been frontwoman of the Glaswegian band Chvrches, topping festival bills and the album charts with a trademark barrage of distorted synths and razor-sharp melodies. Mayberry was the baby of the band - just 23 when she joined, and years younger than her bandmates, Iain Cook and Martin Doherty. But their chemistry was instant. Chvrches' debut single, The Mother We Share, was written and recorded in 48 hours, using the only three synths they owned - but it became a word of mouth hit, earning them airplay on BBC Radio 1 and support slots with Passion Pit and Depeche Mode. In the press, they carefully presented themselves as a band, with each member receiving equal billing. But Mayberry says she worried about being the junior partner. "I was always conscious that I was younger than the other guys, and they had a lot more experience," she says. "They’d been to music school, and I hadn't. So I always felt like I was on the back foot, in terms of where I sat in the hierarchy." That feeling was amplified during a 2019 tour of Australia. The itinerary gave the band a four-day break in Melbourne, and Mayberry was looking forward to spending the downtime with her bandmates and the crew - until she discovered they'd made separate plans and she was stranded in her hotel room. "I remember being very upset and hurt by that because I was always worrying about everyone else and taking care of everybody, and it was a humbling moment," she says. "In the end, I hired a little car and drove to an Australian spa town and had a wee cry listening to Taylor Swift’s Cruel Summer." Looking back, she thinks that being the only woman in the touring party left her carrying the "emotional labour" of keeping the show on the road. "I feel like I twisted myself into a pretzel sometimes to make everyone happy. "Then I’d look back and think, ‘And were you happy?' "Not really, but I was keeping the peace." She considered leaving the band after that Australian incident. Then Covid struck, and Chvrches ended up making a fourth album, 2021's Screen Violence, remotely. She finally took the plunge a year later, but not before signing a new record deal with her bandmates, assuring the future of the project. "I was conscious it would give people a sense of security, that I’d made a commitment," she says. "I don’t know that that’s how it actually works, but that was my hope." She’s keen to stress there’s no bad blood: Doherty and Cook have given her their full support. Still, it’s natural for someone leaving a band to define themselves in opposition to that music - otherwise what’s the point? As Mayberry succinctly puts it: “I didn’t want to make a crap knock-off Chvrches record.” In recording sessions, she'd flinch when anyone pulled out a vintage synth. Instead, she pursued a more organic, lyrics-first approach. But after a decade in a trio, the instinct to compromise was hard-wired. “I'm very used to arguing my point, then trying to see other people's point of view," she says. "So it was a real learning curve to be like, ‘No, this is my opinion, and if I don't think it's right, then it's not right, and that's the end of the conversation'.” The result is Vicious Creature, an album that showcases new depths to Mayberry‘s voice, which fluctuates between vulnerability and venom, while paying homage to her pop heroines. She channels the spirit of All Saints on the album opener Something In The Air; and borrows the choppy, sampled strings of Annie Lennox's Walking On Broken Glass to power the single Crocodile Tears. The latter is a furious riposte to an emotionally mani[CENSORED]tive man, where Mayberry snarls: “What a man will say just to get his way / Always crying wolf, so I’m sad to say / I don’t really wanna hear it from you, babe". The singer says she's role-playing in that song, inspired by the dark, subversive femininity of Velma Kelly in the musical Chicago, or Cabaret's Sally Bowles. It's one of several songs that survived the first incarnation of the album - tentatively titled Fiction - that would be "dark, theatrical and character driven". Slowly, over time, more personal songs started to creep into the mix. The syncopated pulse of Change Shapes is a condemnation of music industry sexism ("I'm a doll inside a box, with a ball and a chain"). Sorry, Etc tells a similar story over a chaotic hybrid of garage rock and drum & bass. "There were definitely a few songs where it was at best expressing frustrations and at worst [feeling] kind of hurt," about her life in music, Mayberry says. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy7k830zdejo
  10. Emerald tree boas have highly developed front teeth that are likely proportionately larger than those of any other non-venomous snake. Their color pattern typically consists of an emerald green ground color with a white irregular interrupted zigzag stripe or so-called 'lightning bolts' down the back and a yellow belly. The bright coloration and markings are very distinctive among South American snakes. Juveniles vary in color between various shades of light and dark orange or brick-red before ontogenetic coloration sets in and the animals turn emerald green (after 9-12 months of age).
  11. From the moment when Cameron Carter-Vickers was ironically cheered by the Red Shed after successfully completing a backpass to his goalkeeper - something he failed to do a week ago against Club Brugge - to the lusty tackle Kevin Nisbet put in when ransacking Alex Valle, this was tumultuous stuff. Only a minute had been played and skin and hair was flying. Steady rain and regular aggro. On the radio gantry, the great Willie Miller smiled, wistfully. An old school scrap. Toe to toe. Where else would you rather be? Some might tell you the most beautiful sound in the world is birds chirping, leaves rustling, a fire crackling. On evenings like this, it was a touch more fundamental. An Aberdeen tackle - legal or otherwise - brought a cacophony. Sweet music. A couple of minutes in, Kyogo Furuhashi went haring away into space deep in the Aberdeen half, the inexperienced goalkeeper Ross Doohan his only obstacle to a possible opener. Total commitment from both men meant a brutal collision. Kyogo, blameless, clashed with Doohan's head and it was worrying. The goalkeeper stayed down awhile. Replays showed the extent of the dunt. Kyogo, touchingly, stayed with him all the time. You thought Doohan’s day was done but he picked himself up and carried on. In the days of Dimitar Mitov, Doohan's time on the pitch has been limited, but he was good on Wednesday night. Durable after the Kyogo incident and inspired at times later on when Celtic started to pile on the pressure. The Dons dug in. They weren't all that threatening in attack, they didn’t cause Kasper Schmeichel a whole pile of trouble until the closing minutes when they were chasing like madmen, but they were dogged against the champions, they made a fight of it against an attacking force that put six on them the last time they played. Celtic always suggested that a goal was coming. Towards the end of the first half they had a series of corners, vicious deliveries whipped in from the beach end. Paulo Bernardo scored directly from one of them, but it was correctly ruled out when Daizen Maeda was seen to have backed into Doohan. Alistair Johnston was a few feet away from connecting with another, a touch probably being enough to break the deadlock. The jostling amid all this was intense. No quarter asked, no quarter given. It wasn't pretty, but given the lousy conditions and the bearpit nature of the contest, it was compelling. Celtic are a domestic machine. It's easy for them when the sun shines and their game is connected and the stars are all aligned. They nearly always win. Other questions were asked here. A baying home crowd, vile weather, a belligerent opponent. And they won again. Formidable and unstoppable. The clues were coming. In the 71st minute they pushed Aberdeen back, almost into the front rows of the Red Shed. Johnston had a shot blocked, then another, then Hatate had a shot saved by Doohan, then Doohan saved from Adam Idah, a flying stop away to his right that made you wonder for a second if the deadlock could be broken, if Aberdeen's resistance could, in fact, hold. Or better. Leighton Clarkson was in space in front of Celtic's goal, but pulled his shot and the moment passed. Teams who miss chances tend to regret them when it's Celtic down the other end. Two minutes after Clarkson missed, Hatate scored. It was Greg Taylor, the full-back on as a substitute for Valle, who played it into Hatate. Taylor doesn't have Valle's glamorous Barcelona back story, but he continues to be an invaluable operator in Celtic's unrelenting nature. He chipped it into Hatate and then a thing of beauty broke out for the first time on the night. Hatate chested it, let it fall and calmly hit it on the half-volley. One fluid movement, one classy goal. It was enough, just. Aberdeen came back at them, Sokler lashing one over when he had Schmeichel in his sights. The grunt put in by Carter-Vickers in trying to close him down was the sign of a player battling to the last. Celtic won and their lead at the top now looks insurmountable at seven points, plus a game in hand. Let's be honest, the league is done. It was clear nobody was realistically going to catch this Celtic team before Wednesday and, after Hatate's star turn, it's all but certain nobody is catching them now. https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/articles/c0lgwllx6g4o
  12. Lawmakers in South Korea have narrowly failed to impeach the nation's president over his short-lived attempt to declare martial law. A bill to censure Yoon Suk Yeol fell three votes short of the 200 needed to pass, with many members of parliament in the ruling People Power Party (PPP) boycotting the vote. The South Korean premier sparked widespread shock and anger when he declared military rule - associated with authoritarianism in the country - on Tuesday, in a bid to break out of a political stalemate. Yoon's declaration was quickly overturned by parliament, before his government rescinded it a few hours later in the midst of large protests. As it happened: South Korea's impeachment vote Why did South Korea's president declare martial law? Six hours that shook South Korea The impeachment bill needed a two-thirds majority in the National Assembly to pass, meaning at least eight PPP MPs would have to vote in favour. However, all but three walked out of the chamber earlier on Saturday. One of those who remained, Cho Kyung-tae, credited Yoon's apology for the martial law decree on Saturday morning - after three days out of public view - as having influenced his decision not to back impeachment this time. "The president's apology and his willingness to step down early, as well as delegating all political agendas to the party, did have an impact on my decision," he told the BBC ahead of the vote. Cho said he believed impeachment would hand the presidency to the leader of the Democratic Party of Korea (DPK), Lee Jae-myung. He added that Yoon's "irrational and absurd decision" to declare martial law had "overshadowed" what he described as the DPK's "many extreme actions" while in power. DPK lawmaker Lee Unjoo told the BBC that she had cried when PPP politicians walked out. "We did know there was a possibility they might boycott the vote, but we didn't believe they would actually go through with it when tens of thousands of citizens were watching right outside," she said. Following Saturday's vote, Lee insisted his party "will not give up" with its attempts to impeach Yoon, who he said had become "the worst risk" to South Korea. "We will definitely return this country to normal by Christmas and the end of the year," he told a crowd gathered outside the parliament in the capital, Seoul. Prior to Tuesday, martial law - temporary rule by military authorities in a time of emergency, during which civil rights are usually curtailed - had not been declared in South Korea since before it became a parliamentary democracy in 1987. Yoon claimed the measures were needed to defeat "anti-state forces" in the parliament and referred to North Korea. But others saw the move as an extreme reaction to the political stalemate that had arisen since the DPK won a landslide in April, reducing his government to vetoing the bills it passed, as well as Yoon's increasing unpo[CENSORED]rity in the wake of a scandal surrounding the First Lady. The president's late-night address caused dramatic scenes at the National Assembly, with protesters descending en masse as military personnel attempted to block entry to the building. Lawmakers tussled with the soldiers, with 190 MPs making it into the building to vote down the order. In the early hours of Wednesday morning, Yoon's cabinet rescinded the martial law declaration. However, the short-lived military takeover has seen daily protests on the streets. Some came out in support of Yoon, though they were drowned out by angry mobs. Authorities have since revealed more about the events of Tuesday night. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpw22k2z0rdo
  13. La inteligencia artificial se está extendiendo a todo tipo de campos y sectores, y no solo aquellos relacionados con la tecnología. De ahí que varias empresas, como ahora sucede con Microsoft, lancen cursos formativos para que podamos aprender y encontrar un trabajo relacionado con todo ello. Os contamos todo esto porque en estos instantes la empresa Microsoft, la Comunidad de Madrid y Founderz, han lanzado una iniciativa de formación gratuita para aprender los conceptos básicos sobre inteligencia artificial. Además, es importante tener en consideración que se trata de una serie de cursos formativos totalmente gratuitos. Seguro que también nos interesa saber que los mismos estarán disponibles por un total de 100.000 estudiantes interesados. En realidad se trata de una asociación para proporcionar a los más jóvenes una serie de cursos centrados en el uso y desarrollo de la IA en la Comunidad de Madrid. De hecho, en el acto presentación estuvo la presidenta regional, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, apoyando esta iniciativa. Requisitos para apuntarte al curso IA de Microsoft En estos momentos, en la web de Founderz, nos encontramos con la posibilidad de apuntarnos al curso gratuito de IA Responsable y Prompt Engineering. Debemos tener en consideración que se trata de una iniciativa que los inscritos podrán llevar a cabo completamente online y sin coste alguno. La inscripción como tal está abierta para todos los jóvenes con edades comprendidas entre los 16 y los 26 años. A su vez, es importante tener en consideración que el curso se ha desarrollado para que estos jóvenes tan solo tengan que emplear alrededor de 30 minutos al día a lo largo de una semana completa. Podrán emplear este tiempo para terminar el curso como tal, dependiendo de sus propias necesidades y desde la comodidad de casa. A su vez, a muchos les gustará saber que una vez hayan finalizado el curso en su totalidad, recibirán una insignia de logro de la propia Microsoft. Esta la podremos añadir a nuestro currículum, algo que seguramente muchas empresas tendrán en consideración. Cómo apuntarnos al curso gratuito de inteligencia artificial Uno de los principales objetivos de esta formación es aprender a usar la inteligencia artificial de forma responsable, ética y profesional. Pues bien, una vez sabemos todo esto, podremos apuntarnos a este curso formativo de Microsoft a través de este mismo enlace. En el caso de que estéis interesados en todo esto que os hemos contado y aprender los primeros conceptos sobre el uso de la IA, aquí tenéis el temario al que os tendréis que enfrentar: Introducción al Prompt Engineering. Cómo comunicarnos con la IA: la importancia del Prompt Engineering. Uso avanzado de la plataforma ChatGPT de OpenAI. Utilización avanzada de Copilot Web de Microsoft. Prompts y casos de uso con inteligencia artificial. Compositores de software: programando sin saber programar. Cómo usar la IA de forma responsable. Como os podéis imaginar, todo ello nos servirá para introducirnos en esta interesante tecnología que no para de crecer a lo largo de los últimos meses. En estos instantes muchas empresas están buscando profesionales de mayor o menor nivel para empezar a introducirse en este mundillo que tiene visos de convertirse en muy importante a lo largo de los próximos años. https://www.softzone.es/noticias/general/curso-gratuito-aprender-ia-microsoft-requisitos/
  14. More developers than you think are self-taught, and you can easily teach yourself how to code with this bundle of coding e-courses and Microsoft Visual Studio Pro. You could build a portfolio and start a new career, freelance, or know how to create apps and websites. If you purchase everything separately and not on sale, it would cost you $1,999, but it's only $55.97 on StackSocial for Cyber Week. The 15 coding e-courses cover front-end development with HTML, JavaScript, Vuex, and React and back-end development with Python, Ruby on Rails, Java, C++, and SQL so you can create websites or desktop applications. Or, maybe you're interested in mobile apps with Flutter, Swift, and Kotlin, data science and machine learning, or DevOps engineering with AWS or Azure. Through December 8 at 11:59 p.m. PT, get this bundle of Microsoft Visual Studio Pro and 15 coding e-courses on sale for $55.97 (reg. $1,999) on StackSocial. Supplies are limited, so act while they're still available.Microsoft Visual Studio is an excellent beginner-friendly coding environment, thanks to advanced code editing and debugging tools. As you type, you'll get auto-complete suggestions and options for next-best sections. When it's time to test, you can use hot reload capabilities and edit running pages to make edits. Team collaboration tools also come in handy when working on larger projects, as do version and author histories. Don't miss this Cyber Week deal on this coding package. Through December 8 at 11:59 p.m. PT, get this bundle of Microsoft Visual Studio Pro and 15 coding e-courses on sale for $55.97 (reg. $1,999) on StackSocial. Supplies are limited, so act while they're still available. https://www.techpowerup.com/329565/microsoft-visual-studio-with-coding-courses-is-down-to-usd-56-with-this-deal
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