I was enthusiastic about the title of this post, hoping for something different from the usual lesswrong content, but disappointed by most of the examples. In my view if you take this idea of learning tacit knowledge with video seriously, it shouldn’t affect just how you learn, but what you learn, rather then trying to learn book subjects by watching videos.
If you have recommendations, post them! I doubt the author tried to filter the subjects very much by “book subjects” it’s just what people seem to have found good ones so far.
Thanks for the feedback! I’d be curious to hear more about (1) what subjects you’re referring to and (2) how learning tacit knowledge with video has changed your learning habits (if your view here is based on your own experience).
I was enthusiastic about the title of this post, hoping for something different from the usual lesswrong content, but disappointed by most of the examples. In my view if you take this idea of learning tacit knowledge with video seriously, it shouldn’t affect just how you learn, but what you learn, rather then trying to learn book subjects by watching videos.
If you have recommendations, post them! I doubt the author tried to filter the subjects very much by “book subjects” it’s just what people seem to have found good ones so far.
Thanks for the feedback! I’d be curious to hear more about (1) what subjects you’re referring to and (2) how learning tacit knowledge with video has changed your learning habits (if your view here is based on your own experience).
You’ve already mentioned cooking as an example and this is definitely something I’d like to imiprove in. I looked up how to crack eggs:
How to clip nails: https://www.tiktok.com/@jonijawne/video/7212337177772952838?q=cut%20nails&t=1713988543560
How to improve posture: