djlebarron
01 Nov 2008, 12:31 AM
I just recently looked into free tutorial videos on the web and I'm amazed. There must be thousands of them. I sat tonight listening to my Pandora Radio in the background watching videos. There are the good, the bad and the just plain ugly. I'm even switching off to watching stuff I already know just to catch the occasional gem that I wasn't aware of and to try to anticipate what the author will do next.
I've also seen that many major universities have free video series' on anything from weaving to quantum physics. As an article said, "You won't get a degree, but you'll know the subject."
I did notice that many of the web tutorial videos jump around the subjects in different orders. Many of the authors presume. It's an easy thing to do when you've known your subject for years. In other words, If I were a complete beginner and didn't already know much of the content, or at least the concepts, I'd be confused in no time. Who was it that said that in a perfect world, the best of us would be teachers and the rest of us would have to settle for something else? But... for the beginner or intermediate, there's a wonderland of free video out there.
I've also seen that many major universities have free video series' on anything from weaving to quantum physics. As an article said, "You won't get a degree, but you'll know the subject."
I did notice that many of the web tutorial videos jump around the subjects in different orders. Many of the authors presume. It's an easy thing to do when you've known your subject for years. In other words, If I were a complete beginner and didn't already know much of the content, or at least the concepts, I'd be confused in no time. Who was it that said that in a perfect world, the best of us would be teachers and the rest of us would have to settle for something else? But... for the beginner or intermediate, there's a wonderland of free video out there.