I consider this bloggingheads stuff mostly a waste of time. Everyone is faced with the problem of selecting what media to consume (books, movies, TV, blog posts, etc). A rational person should develop a way of scoring information sources, construct a list of sources ordered by score, and then go down the list one by one. Eliezer’s blog posts may very well be near the top of the list for the right audience, but it’s hard to believe random webcam dialogues he has with other bloggers could be ranked above the great works of literature, philosophy, and history.
One other thing to mention is that for some people, video has very limited value, unless the delivery is particularly inspirational. Reading is a lot more efficient, portable, linkable, etc.
There are reasons to want to hear someone on video: to see how the behave in real-time provides different information about their personality and their mode of thinking. In some cases it may be the next best thing to meeting them in person.
I must say, speeding it up by 40% makes most of these Bloggingheads discussions a lot better—more interesting and no harder to understand. (Does anybody know why they chose sqrt(2) as the speed-up factor?)
I consider this bloggingheads stuff mostly a waste of time. Everyone is faced with the problem of selecting what media to consume (books, movies, TV, blog posts, etc). A rational person should develop a way of scoring information sources, construct a list of sources ordered by score, and then go down the list one by one. Eliezer’s blog posts may very well be near the top of the list for the right audience, but it’s hard to believe random webcam dialogues he has with other bloggers could be ranked above the great works of literature, philosophy, and history.
One other thing to mention is that for some people, video has very limited value, unless the delivery is particularly inspirational. Reading is a lot more efficient, portable, linkable, etc.
There are reasons to want to hear someone on video: to see how the behave in real-time provides different information about their personality and their mode of thinking. In some cases it may be the next best thing to meeting them in person.
I must say, speeding it up by 40% makes most of these Bloggingheads discussions a lot better—more interesting and no harder to understand. (Does anybody know why they chose sqrt(2) as the speed-up factor?)