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Video tutorials - are there any benefits?
Interested in the attitude of the people to video lessons, tk. there are a lot of them everywhere and people seem to use them. Personally, I watched them several times, concluded (for myself) that there is a benefit only if you are completely unfamiliar with the subject matter. They are useless for advanced training - the book is many times more effective (we are not talking about interactive courses).
The question is, does my opinion coincide with the opinion of the majority? Thank you.
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Video tutorials are good where it is better to see once than to read seven times - to describe difficult or controversial points. My attitude towards videos is positive. Videos, books, interactive courses, documentation - each way of presenting information is good in its own way. There is no need to give up any of them.
Setting up the working environment: video is more convenient.
Programming training: good quality, slow rewind hard handle, 2 monitors.
The video is the basic tutorial.
Practice is personal experience.
And, of course, a lot - depends on the commentator behind the scenes (professional level) and the structure of the presentation of the material.
Personally, video tutorials are a waste of time.
Read much faster.
Subjectively, the speed of assimilation of information with a video lesson is noticeably less than with a book. Especially when you are already familiar with the topic to some extent. Everything has already become clear, you miss waiting, your hands are reaching out to open the habr.
Well, there is one plus - you can listen without looking, the visual apparatus is resting. But this does not apply to every lesson.
There is no benefit.
A pointless waste of time.
Unless, of course, we are talking about lessons, and not about lectures on theory, for example, or talking about new technology.
They gained distribution because people watch them, because it looks very simple - you don’t even need to read - just watch the video and that’s it, you can think that you spent your time usefully, and this is the main goal - to find an excuse for the time spent.
Video tutorials are very, very helpful for getting started. Many of the nuances can be understood from them.
When there is a lot of experience in a topic, then the video will not be interesting, because. it will seem very boring to watch and listen to what you know for the most part.
Only if you look for ten minutes for inspiration, to see how effectively an experienced user works. From a learning point of view, the videos are meaningless. It is unrealistic to remember, if you try to repeat, then you need to pause every five seconds. Waste of time. Books and articles are more effective.
Video tutorials are a push in the right direction.
The truth still depends a lot on the quality of the video course.
After watching the course video, you already understand more where to press and what to write.
But you will not become a pro after watching, everything is framed as soon as you want to do something of your own, you will need to google and read.
I personally could not start with books, as they are hard to come by due to unknown terms, etc.
I first watch the course, delve into the essence and at the same time do something of my own, and do not stupidly repeat after the author, after which I turn to books, since everything is said there more heatedly
Depending on who submits the video and who wrote the book, I will say from personal experience that a lot depends on the author, even on the reader / reviewer himself, how much he wants to learn the information.
For example, I like to watch a screencast of something new to me over lunch or a cup of coffee - a good way to broaden my horizons without noticing. Sometimes the subject of study captivates, you begin to be more seriously interested in it and you don’t want to put it off until later - you already know how cool and easy it is to learn, but this uncle can talk well about the basics in his videos.
So I started doing web stuff.
Just this morning, he told his wife that video courses are only useful for a quick overview of an unfamiliar topic. Like a tour. For study and development - there is no use. Unless, of course, in a complex, as, for example, on coursera.org - with tasks, a forum (communication) and written material.
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