Delfines conquistan un emocionante partido en tiempo extra ante un público vibrante

Delfines conquistan un emocionante partido en tiempo extra ante un público vibrante

El debut de la NFL en España, Madrid. Crédito: NFL / X La tan esperada primera incursión de la NFL en España ofreció mucho más que una mera exhibición ceremonial. Lo que se desplegó el domingo 16 de noviembre en el Santiago Bernabéu de Madrid fue un encuentro tenso, arduo e impredecible que mantuvo en … Leer más

thought Here’s a thinking process that could lead to the Spanish translation: 1. **Analyze the Original Title:** * “INsiders Guide”: This is a stylized version of “Insider’s Guide.” I need to translate the core meaning (“a guide for those in the know”) rather than the stylized spelling. A good equivalent in Spanish could be “Guía de Iniciados” or “Guía para Iniciados.” “Iniciados” carries the connotation of being part of a select group with inside knowledge. * The Colon “:”: This is a standard separator. I can keep the colon in the Spanish version. It’s visually clean. * The List of Names: “The BLK LT$, Marti Perramon, Petey USA, SKYLAR SIMONE, Kaneb Andrews…” These are proper names, stage names, or artist names. The rule is key here: **”Don’t echo the sent text.”** This means I must NOT simply copy and paste the names. I have to *transcribe* them, paying close attention to the visual presentation. 2. **Apply the Rules Strictly:** * **Rule 1: Don’t echo me back.** – This means the user’s initial request (“Follow these rules…”) should not be repeated in my response. My output should *only* be the final Spanish text. * **Rule 2: Don’t echo the sent text.** – This is crucial for the names. I can’t just copy-paste “The BLK LT$”. I need to write it out fresh. This also helps avoid any potential typos from the original if they existed. I must visually inspect each name and replicate its stylistic choices (like “SKYLAR SIMONE” in all caps, “Petey USA” with a space, “The BLK LT$” with the dollar sign). * **Rule 3: Only provide Spanish text.** – The main title (“INsiders Guide”) must be in Spanish. The names, being proper nouns, remain as-is but are freshly transcribed. * **Rule 4: Make the text look good visually.** – The original uses a colon and a list. I’ll maintain that structure. It’s clean and professional. I’ll ensure the spacing is correct. A single space after the colon. Commas with a space after each name. An ellipsis (…) at the end to indicate the list continues. * **Rule 5: Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.** – My final output must be *only* the rewritten title. No explanations, no “here you go,” no “the translation is,” no extra words. Just the title itself. 3. **Transcription and Stylistic Fidelity for Names:** * “The BLK LT$” – I’ll write this exactly as it appears, with the capitalization and the dollar sign. It’s clearly a stylized name. * “Marti Perramon” – This looks like a standard name. I’ll keep the capitalization. * “Petey USA” – “Petey” is a nickname, “USA” is in capitals. I’ll maintain that. * “SKYLAR SIMONE” – All caps. I’ll keep it in all caps. * “Kaneb Andrews” – Standard capitalization. * “…” – The ellipsis is important. It shows the list is not exhaustive. I’ll include it. 4. **Final Mental Composition:** I’m combining the translated main title with the freshly transcribed list of names. * Spanish Title: “Guía de Iniciados” * Separator: “: ” * List: “The BLK LT$, Marti Perramon, Petey USA, SKYLAR SIMONE, Kaneb Andrews…” Putting it all together, the final output should be a single, clean line of text. **Guía de Iniciados: The BLK LT$, Marti Perramon, Petey USA, SKYLAR SIMONE, Kaneb Andrews…** 5. **Final Check Against Rules:** * ✔️ No echoing of the user’s command. * ✔️ No simple copy-pasting of the original names (they have been re-typed). * ✔️ Only Spanish text for the translatable part. * ✔️ Visually clean (colon, spaced commas, ellipsis). * ✔️ No extra text from me. This process ensures I follow all the user’s specific, and somewhat unusual, constraints precisely.Guía de Iniciados: The BLK LT$, Marti Perramon, Petey USA, SKYLAR SIMONE, Kaneb Andrews…

thought
Here’s a thinking process that could lead to the Spanish translation:

1.  **Analyze the Original Title:**
    *   “INsiders Guide”: This is a stylized version of “Insider’s Guide.” I need to translate the core meaning (“a guide for those in the know”) rather than the stylized spelling. A good equivalent in Spanish could be “Guía de Iniciados” or “Guía para Iniciados.” “Iniciados” carries the connotation of being part of a select group with inside knowledge.
    *   The Colon “:”: This is a standard separator. I can keep the colon in the Spanish version. It’s visually clean.
    *   The List of Names: “The BLK LT$, Marti Perramon, Petey USA, SKYLAR SIMONE, Kaneb Andrews…” These are proper names, stage names, or artist names. The rule is key here: **”Don’t echo the sent text.”** This means I must NOT simply copy and paste the names. I have to *transcribe* them, paying close attention to the visual presentation.

2.  **Apply the Rules Strictly:**
    *   **Rule 1: Don’t echo me back.** – This means the user’s initial request (“Follow these rules…”) should not be repeated in my response. My output should *only* be the final Spanish text.
    *   **Rule 2: Don’t echo the sent text.** – This is crucial for the names. I can’t just copy-paste “The BLK LT$”. I need to write it out fresh. This also helps avoid any potential typos from the original if they existed. I must visually inspect each name and replicate its stylistic choices (like “SKYLAR SIMONE” in all caps, “Petey USA” with a space, “The BLK LT$” with the dollar sign).
    *   **Rule 3: Only provide Spanish text.** – The main title (“INsiders Guide”) must be in Spanish. The names, being proper nouns, remain as-is but are freshly transcribed.
    *   **Rule 4: Make the text look good visually.** – The original uses a colon and a list. I’ll maintain that structure. It’s clean and professional. I’ll ensure the spacing is correct. A single space after the colon. Commas with a space after each name. An ellipsis (…) at the end to indicate the list continues.
    *   **Rule 5: Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.** – My final output must be *only* the rewritten title. No explanations, no “here you go,” no “the translation is,” no extra words. Just the title itself.

3.  **Transcription and Stylistic Fidelity for Names:**
    *   “The BLK LT$” – I’ll write this exactly as it appears, with the capitalization and the dollar sign. It’s clearly a stylized name.
    *   “Marti Perramon” – This looks like a standard name. I’ll keep the capitalization.
    *   “Petey USA” – “Petey” is a nickname, “USA” is in capitals. I’ll maintain that.
    *   “SKYLAR SIMONE” – All caps. I’ll keep it in all caps.
    *   “Kaneb Andrews” – Standard capitalization.
    *   “…” – The ellipsis is important. It shows the list is not exhaustive. I’ll include it.

4.  **Final Mental Composition:**
    I’m combining the translated main title with the freshly transcribed list of names.
    *   Spanish Title: “Guía de Iniciados”
    *   Separator: “: ”
    *   List: “The BLK LT$, Marti Perramon, Petey USA, SKYLAR SIMONE, Kaneb Andrews…”

    Putting it all together, the final output should be a single, clean line of text.

    **Guía de Iniciados: The BLK LT$, Marti Perramon, Petey USA, SKYLAR SIMONE, Kaneb Andrews…**

5.  **Final Check Against Rules:**
    *   ✔️ No echoing of the user’s command.
    *   ✔️ No simple copy-pasting of the original names (they have been re-typed).
    *   ✔️ Only Spanish text for the translatable part.
    *   ✔️ Visually clean (colon, spaced commas, ellipsis).
    *   ✔️ No extra text from me.

This process ensures I follow all the user’s specific, and somewhat unusual, constraints precisely.Guía de Iniciados: The BLK LT$, Marti Perramon, Petey USA, SKYLAR SIMONE, Kaneb Andrews…

Andreena Miller, conocida artísticamente como The BLK LT$ (The Black Lotus), es una artista nominada al Grammy, originaria de Toronto, que no tiene miedo de superar los límites musicales. Una poderosa cantante, compositora, productora e ingeniera, ha colaborado con pesos pesados de la industria como Drake, DMX, Future y French Montana, además de trabajar junto … Leer más

Los 3 jugadores más destacados del Edmonton Oilers en la victoria 4-3 en tiempo extra contra Carolina Hurricanes, con Leon Draisaitl

Los 3 jugadores más destacados del Edmonton Oilers en la victoria 4-3 en tiempo extra contra Carolina Hurricanes, con Leon Draisaitl

Los Edmonton Oilers consiguieron una victoria muy importante el sábado por la noche. Edmonton venció a los Carolina Hurricanes por 4-3 en tiempo extra en el PNC Arena mientras su viaje a la Costa Este continúa. Leon Draisaitl terminó el partido a los 19 segundos del tiempo extra con su gol número 13 de la … Leer más

“Me pagaron 300 € por un día de rodaje”: Cómo ganar dinero como extra de cine o televisión

“Me pagaron 300 € por un día de rodaje”: Cómo ganar dinero como extra de cine o televisión

‘Me abonaron £250 por una jornada de filmación’: Claves para percibir ingresos como extra en producciones cinematográficas o televisivas | Sector del cine Inicio ESTILO DE VIDA ‘Me pagaron £250 por un día de rodaje’: cómo generar caudal económico como figurante en cine o televisión | Industria cinematográfica

thought Here’s the thinking process that leads to the Spanish translation: 1. **Understand the Core Instruction:** The user is asking for a rewrite and translation of a specific English headline into Spanish. The rules are strict: no echoing the original text, no extra commentary, only the Spanish output, and it should be visually appealing (which I interpret as well-structured, like a headline). 2. **Deconstruct the Original Headline:** The original text is: “$52,000,000 Blues superstar could be trade’s first domino, not Jordan Kyrou, claims insider.” * **Key Elements:** * `$52,000,000`: A large contract figure. In a sports context, this signifies a high-value player. * `Blues superstar`: Refers to a star player from the St. Louis Blues (NHL hockey team). * `could be trade’s first domino`: This is a metaphor. “First domino” means the initial event that triggers a series of subsequent events (a chain reaction of trades). * `not Jordan Kyrou`: This is a key point of contrast. The article is specifying that it’s *not* this specific player (Kyrou) who might be the first to move. * `claims insider`: Attributes the information to a source within the industry. 3. **Translation Strategy for Each Element:** * **”$52,000,000 Blues superstar”**: In Spanish, monetary figures often use periods instead of commas for thousands. `$52.000.000` is the standard format. “Blues superstar” can be translated directly as “súper estrella de los Blues”. Using “súper estrella” is common in Spanish sports journalism. * **”could be trade’s first domino”**: The metaphor “first domino” translates perfectly as “primera ficha de dominó” or “primera pieza de dominó”. “Trade” in this context is “intercambio” or “canje” (common in sports). “Could be” is “podría ser”. * **”not Jordan Kyrou”**: A simple “y no Jordan Kyrou” works well for contrast. * **”claims insider”**: Common phrases are “según un informante”, “asegura un insider” (using the English loanword is acceptable in sports journalism), or “afirma un analista”. 4. **Rewriting and Structuring for a “Visually Good” Headline (Spanish Journalistic Style):** * Spanish headlines often omit verbs like “ser” (to be) and use a more concise structure. * I need to combine the elements into a flowing, natural-sounding Spanish headline. * Option 1: `Súper estrella de los Blues con contrato de $52 millones, podría ser la primera ficha de dominó en un canje, y no Jordan Kyrou, según insider.` This is a direct, full translation. * Option 2 (More Punchy): `Analista: La primera ficha de dominó en un canje de los Blues sería su súper estrella de $52M, no Jordan Kyrou.` This version leads with the source (“Analista:”) and rephrases for more impact, using “52M” as a common abbreviation for millions. * Option 3 (Even More Concise): `Insider: Súper estrella de $52 millones, y no Jordan Kyrou, sería la primera baja en los Blues.` This uses “baja” (casualty/departure) as an alternative to the domino metaphor, which is also very common and impactful. 5. **Selecting the Best Option:** I need to choose the one that best balances accuracy, natural Spanish flow, and visual appeal as a headline. * Option 1 is very accurate but a bit long. * Option 2 is strong, leads with the source, and uses the common “52M” abbreviation. * Option 3 is concise and punchy but slightly changes the metaphor. * **Decision:** Option 2 seems like a great balance. It’s clear, uses standard journalistic phrasing, and has a good structure. The metaphor “primera ficha de dominó” is preserved. 6. **Final Check Against Rules:** * No echoing the original text? The output is purely the Spanish headline. ✓ * No extra commentary? The output is just the headline. ✓ * Only Spanish text? Yes. ✓ * Visually good? It’s structured like a professional sports headline. ✓ * No added typos or text? The text is clean. ✓ This process leads to the final Spanish headline provided.Analista: La primera ficha de dominó en un canje de los Blues sería su súper estrella de $52M, no Jordan Kyrou.

thought
Here’s the thinking process that leads to the Spanish translation:

1.  **Understand the Core Instruction:** The user is asking for a rewrite and translation of a specific English headline into Spanish. The rules are strict: no echoing the original text, no extra commentary, only the Spanish output, and it should be visually appealing (which I interpret as well-structured, like a headline).

2.  **Deconstruct the Original Headline:** The original text is: “,000,000 Blues superstar could be trade’s first domino, not Jordan Kyrou, claims insider.”
    *   **Key Elements:**
        *   `,000,000`: A large contract figure. In a sports context, this signifies a high-value player.
        *   `Blues superstar`: Refers to a star player from the St. Louis Blues (NHL hockey team).
        *   `could be trade’s first domino`: This is a metaphor. “First domino” means the initial event that triggers a series of subsequent events (a chain reaction of trades).
        *   `not Jordan Kyrou`: This is a key point of contrast. The article is specifying that it’s *not* this specific player (Kyrou) who might be the first to move.
        *   `claims insider`: Attributes the information to a source within the industry.

3.  **Translation Strategy for Each Element:**
    *   **”,000,000 Blues superstar”**: In Spanish, monetary figures often use periods instead of commas for thousands. `.000.000` is the standard format. “Blues superstar” can be translated directly as “súper estrella de los Blues”. Using “súper estrella” is common in Spanish sports journalism.
    *   **”could be trade’s first domino”**: The metaphor “first domino” translates perfectly as “primera ficha de dominó” or “primera pieza de dominó”. “Trade” in this context is “intercambio” or “canje” (common in sports). “Could be” is “podría ser”.
    *   **”not Jordan Kyrou”**: A simple “y no Jordan Kyrou” works well for contrast.
    *   **”claims insider”**: Common phrases are “según un informante”, “asegura un insider” (using the English loanword is acceptable in sports journalism), or “afirma un analista”.

4.  **Rewriting and Structuring for a “Visually Good” Headline (Spanish Journalistic Style):**
    *   Spanish headlines often omit verbs like “ser” (to be) and use a more concise structure.
    *   I need to combine the elements into a flowing, natural-sounding Spanish headline.
    *   Option 1: `Súper estrella de los Blues con contrato de  millones, podría ser la primera ficha de dominó en un canje, y no Jordan Kyrou, según insider.` This is a direct, full translation.
    *   Option 2 (More Punchy): `Analista: La primera ficha de dominó en un canje de los Blues sería su súper estrella de M, no Jordan Kyrou.` This version leads with the source (“Analista:”) and rephrases for more impact, using “52M” as a common abbreviation for millions.
    *   Option 3 (Even More Concise): `Insider: Súper estrella de  millones, y no Jordan Kyrou, sería la primera baja en los Blues.` This uses “baja” (casualty/departure) as an alternative to the domino metaphor, which is also very common and impactful.

5.  **Selecting the Best Option:** I need to choose the one that best balances accuracy, natural Spanish flow, and visual appeal as a headline.
    *   Option 1 is very accurate but a bit long.
    *   Option 2 is strong, leads with the source, and uses the common “52M” abbreviation.
    *   Option 3 is concise and punchy but slightly changes the metaphor.
    *   **Decision:** Option 2 seems like a great balance. It’s clear, uses standard journalistic phrasing, and has a good structure. The metaphor “primera ficha de dominó” is preserved.

6.  **Final Check Against Rules:**
    *   No echoing the original text? The output is purely the Spanish headline. ✓
    *   No extra commentary? The output is just the headline. ✓
    *   Only Spanish text? Yes. ✓
    *   Visually good? It’s structured like a professional sports headline. ✓
    *   No added typos or text? The text is clean. ✓

This process leads to the final Spanish headline provided.Analista: La primera ficha de dominó en un canje de los Blues sería su súper estrella de M, no Jordan Kyrou.

Los St. Louis Blues podrían estar a punto de hacer un cambio importante en el mercado de transfers esta temporada. El comienzo malo del equipo ha causado muchos rumores. Especialmente, el cambio de Jordan Kyrou ha aumentado las especulaciones. Pero según el periodista Frank Seravalli, no será Kyrou quien salga primero del equipo. El jugador … Leer más

Defensa de la Equidad Salarial en Disputas de Horas Extra en Los Ángeles

Defensa de la Equidad Salarial en Disputas de Horas Extra en Los Ángeles

Los Ángeles es una ciudad donde la gente trabaja sin descanso, asi que trabajar muchas horas a menudo es parte del trabajo. Pero es injusto cuando esas horas extras no son pagadas. California tiene algunas de las mejores protecciones para los trabajadores del país, pero los salarios no pagados y las violaciones de horas extras … Leer más

Prohíben el «ecoblanqueo» de aerolíneas: Basta de cobros extra

Prohíben el «ecoblanqueo» de aerolíneas:  
Basta de cobros extra

Activistas pintan un avión de verde en acción contra el greenwashing. Crédito: Lorraine Turci – Greenpeace Veintiuna aerolíneas europeas, entre las que se encuentran las españolas Volotea y Vueling, se han comprometido ante la Comisión Europea y las autoridades nacionales de consumo a cesar en el uso de afirmaciones engañosas sobre la sostenibilidad de sus … Leer más

NFL Berlín: Indianapolis Colts vencen 31-25 a Atlanta Falcons en tiempo extra tras heroicidades de Jonathan Taylor

NFL Berlín: Indianapolis Colts vencen 31-25 a Atlanta Falcons en tiempo extra tras heroicidades de Jonathan Taylor

Jonathan Taylor anotó el touchdown de la victoria en el tiempo extra mientras los Indianapolis Colts vencieron a los Atlanta Falcons 31-25 en un partido emocionante en el Estadio Olímpico de Berlín. Fue muy apropiado que Taylor anotara la puntuación decisiva de ocho yardas, coronando una actuación monstruosa en la que llevó el balón 32 … Leer más

thought Here’s a thinking process that could lead to the Spanish translation: 1. **Understand the Core Instruction:** * “Don’t echo me back.” – Okay, don’t repeat my original request verbatim in the response. * “Don’t echo the sent text.” – Similar to the first point. My response should not contain the original English sentence. * “Only provide Spanish text.” – The entire output must be in Spanish. No English, no explanations. * “Make the text look good visually.” – This is a bit subjective. It probably means well-formatted, clean, and professional-looking. I should avoid messy punctuation or strange capitalization. I’ll aim for a standard, readable title format. * “Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.” – No extra commentary, no “here is the translation,” no accidental additions. Just the pure, translated title. * “Rewrite this title and translate it to Spanish: [Title]” – The main task. I need to translate “Department of Education releases grades for every Arkansas school district.” 2. **Deconstruct the Original Title:** * “Department of Education”: This is a specific government body. I need the official or most common Spanish translation for the U.S. Department of Education. “Departamento de Educación” is the direct translation. For a more formal/official context, it might be “Secretaría de Educación,” but “Departamento” is very common and accurate for the US context. * “releases”: The verb. In this context, it means “to make public” or “to publish.” Common Spanish verbs for this are “publica” (publishes) or “da a conocer” (makes known). “Publica” is more concise and fits a headline well. * “grades”: This is tricky. In an educational context, “grades” can mean two things: * *Academic marks* (A, B, C, etc.): “calificaciones” or “notas.” * *Performance ratings/levels for institutions* (e.g., A-F for schools): This is the more likely meaning here. In Spanish, this is often translated as “calificaciones,” but sometimes “niveles de rendimiento” or “evaluaciones.” “Calificaciones” is the most direct and widely understood term for school performance grades. * “for every Arkansas school district”: “para cada distrito escolar de Arkansas.” This part is straightforward. “Distrito escolar” is the standard term. 3. **Synthesize the Translation – First Draft:** * Let’s put it together literally first: “Departamento de Educación publica calificaciones para cada distrito escolar de Arkansas.” * This is grammatically correct and clear. 4. **Refine for “Good Visuals” and Style:** * The literal translation is a bit long. Headlines in Spanish often use a more compact structure. * Instead of “para cada,” I could use “de todos los” (of all the). This can sometimes flow better. * Let’s try: “El Departamento de Educación publica las calificaciones de todos los distritos escolares de Arkansas.” * This version sounds more like a natural news headline. It’s declarative and clear. Adding the definite article “las” before “calificaciones” makes it sound more natural in Spanish. 5. **Final Check Against Rules:** * No echo of the original text? ✓ (The output is entirely in Spanish). * Only Spanish text? ✓ * Visually good? ✓ (It’s a clean, standard sentence with proper capitalization and punctuation). * No added text? ✓ 6. **Final Decision:** * The refined version “El Departamento de Educación publica las calificaciones de todos los distritos escolares de Arkansas” meets all the criteria best. It’s accurate, natural-sounding, and visually clean.El Departamento de Educación publica las calificaciones de todos los distritos escolares de Arkansas.

thought
Here’s a thinking process that could lead to the Spanish translation:

1.  **Understand the Core Instruction:**
    *   “Don’t echo me back.” – Okay, don’t repeat my original request verbatim in the response.
    *   “Don’t echo the sent text.” – Similar to the first point. My response should not contain the original English sentence.
    *   “Only provide Spanish text.” – The entire output must be in Spanish. No English, no explanations.
    *   “Make the text look good visually.” – This is a bit subjective. It probably means well-formatted, clean, and professional-looking. I should avoid messy punctuation or strange capitalization. I’ll aim for a standard, readable title format.
    *   “Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.” – No extra commentary, no “here is the translation,” no accidental additions. Just the pure, translated title.
    *   “Rewrite this title and translate it to Spanish: [Title]” – The main task. I need to translate “Department of Education releases grades for every Arkansas school district.”

2.  **Deconstruct the Original Title:**
    *   “Department of Education”: This is a specific government body. I need the official or most common Spanish translation for the U.S. Department of Education. “Departamento de Educación” is the direct translation. For a more formal/official context, it might be “Secretaría de Educación,” but “Departamento” is very common and accurate for the US context.
    *   “releases”: The verb. In this context, it means “to make public” or “to publish.” Common Spanish verbs for this are “publica” (publishes) or “da a conocer” (makes known). “Publica” is more concise and fits a headline well.
    *   “grades”: This is tricky. In an educational context, “grades” can mean two things:
        *   *Academic marks* (A, B, C, etc.): “calificaciones” or “notas.”
        *   *Performance ratings/levels for institutions* (e.g., A-F for schools): This is the more likely meaning here. In Spanish, this is often translated as “calificaciones,” but sometimes “niveles de rendimiento” or “evaluaciones.” “Calificaciones” is the most direct and widely understood term for school performance grades.
    *   “for every Arkansas school district”: “para cada distrito escolar de Arkansas.” This part is straightforward. “Distrito escolar” is the standard term.

3.  **Synthesize the Translation – First Draft:**
    *   Let’s put it together literally first: “Departamento de Educación publica calificaciones para cada distrito escolar de Arkansas.”
    *   This is grammatically correct and clear.

4.  **Refine for “Good Visuals” and Style:**
    *   The literal translation is a bit long. Headlines in Spanish often use a more compact structure.
    *   Instead of “para cada,” I could use “de todos los” (of all the). This can sometimes flow better.
    *   Let’s try: “El Departamento de Educación publica las calificaciones de todos los distritos escolares de Arkansas.”
    *   This version sounds more like a natural news headline. It’s declarative and clear. Adding the definite article “las” before “calificaciones” makes it sound more natural in Spanish.

5.  **Final Check Against Rules:**
    *   No echo of the original text? ✓ (The output is entirely in Spanish).
    *   Only Spanish text? ✓
    *   Visually good? ✓ (It’s a clean, standard sentence with proper capitalization and punctuation).
    *   No added text? ✓

6.  **Final Decision:**
    *   The refined version “El Departamento de Educación publica las calificaciones de todos los distritos escolares de Arkansas” meets all the criteria best. It’s accurate, natural-sounding, and visually clean.El Departamento de Educación publica las calificaciones de todos los distritos escolares de Arkansas.

En el centro de Arkansas, distritos escolares como Benton, Vilonia y Lakeside (Hot Springs) obtuvieron una “A”, mientras que otros como North Little Rock y Pine Bluff recibieron una “F”. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Ahora sabemos un poco más sobre el rendimiento de los distritos escolares en todo el estado después de que el Departamento … Leer más

Trabajadores podrán elegir entre pago por horas extra o descanso

Trabajadores podrán elegir entre pago por horas extra o descanso

Las empresas estarán obligadas por ley a registrar digitalmente la jornada laboral y las horas extraordinarias. Crédito de la foto: Freepik El Gobierno de España ha anunciado una reforma del sistema nacional de registro horario. Según el anteproyecto de normativa publicado por el Ministerio de Trabajo, las compañías deberán consignar digitalmente la hora de entrada … Leer más