this post was submitted on 29 Aug 2024
1 points (100.0% liked)
MealtimeVideos
1527 readers
1 users here now
Not too short, not too long. Videos to last through your meal.
Rules:
- Submissions must link directly to a video between 5 minutes and 1 hour long.
- Use a duration in your title such as [9:27].
- Be mindful that some people will be watching this while eating. No 'gross' content, no NSFL, racism, bigotry, etc.
- Use a title that is descriptive of the actual video.
- Be respectful of other submitters and commenters. Personal attacks, hate speech, bigotry, etc will not be tolerated.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Beyond enjoying this channel, I've recently been thinking more and more about the value of older books. The trend of the modern internet seems to be leaning towards highly accessible but low quality information, and the amazing density of well-researched information in some older books astounds me.
That's not to say that we haven't made advancements (the volume of information I could find about Newport on, say, Tripadvisor vastly exceeds single-source publications like that in the video), but the combined influences of advertising, SEO, fake reviews, data collection, etc. has taken something away from this type of resource.
I recently asked my FIL how he learned how to build a house. I assumed his father had taught him. He referred me to a stack of about twenty books from the 80s.
For example, there's a book on plumbing. Anything I need to know is right there. No website does that.