Video is good for concepts that need visualizations, though a good blog post with animations or illustrations can work too. Video is required hands on demonstrations, like how to fix something on a car.
But videos showing somebody write code or commands is infuriating. There's no need for that. A blog post with code examples would be much better.
I'll second this. The trend of recording videos or podcasts instead of writing blogs and/or articles is both infuriating and concerning.
Videos, podcasts and audiobooks have attracted a much larger viewership than anybody anticipated. Reading and reading comprehension are on the wane. More and more, I see the label "post-literate" applied to Gen Z and it worries me.
Other things about people coding, though, in tech talks and conference, I actually enjoy seeing the psychological and social impact of the talk as much as the concept being talked about. They're fun.
It isn't weird;)
Wife and I have many conversations about how knowledge absorption is becoming bare media consumption. Listening at her, not as geeky as me, raising her concerns about it, was truly delightful:)
Probably a combination of all three. Maybe with a video guide and text guide on the same page, with the latter also using images and short video clips to illustrate points too.
Video on its own is too slow, and often annoying to wade through if I need to find a particular point. Text on its own can be too vague, and can make it difficult to understand lengthy series of instructions if pictures and videos aren't included (a common problem with text based video game walkthroughs).
I find that programming made me absorb and create content non-linearly. I write a bit of code here, and then there, and then change a little thing in the first bit...
I read like that. I read the book from start to end but I'm constantly going back to back material. (Or sometimes googling stuff.)
In a video, the "pause-rewind" loop is not so easy.
For most CS related content I prefer reading up, but there are particular domains which can't be captured by reading for example - fitness, analysis of movies, learning to play an instrument.
Specific educational videos and video courses are excluded.
These works well to. That said if same material is available in text format - it would be preferred.
> I'll be surprised if more people prefer video form of content.
Not so much video as audio. I work for a company that provides digital lending services for libraries. Guess what type of content is by far the most popular? Audiobooks. It's not even close. Most of the "videoification" of blog posts I see on youtube are basically just podcasts with somebody talking into a video camera instead of a microphone.
I saw Youtube "educational" video from a low life marketing guy recorded himself speaking to camera and teaching others how to record videos of them scrolling PPT slides with affiliate links and make money out of it
Not courses only (or learning purpose), but generally. Say would you prefer consuming content in the form of reading or prefer watching something online?
But videos showing somebody write code or commands is infuriating. There's no need for that. A blog post with code examples would be much better.