(no title)
auntad | 7 years ago
I usually find it difficult to wade through the mountains of possible (often outdated) resources on a topic I'm unfamiliar with - At one point I was thinking it'd be useful to crowdsource those kind of step-by-step guides across a variety of verticals. Kind of like an online class, except pulling from the best up to date blog posts and specific resources from around the internet, instead of relying on a singular POV of the guy who made some videos and called it a course.
Anyone know of anything like that? How do you approach deep diving into unfamiliar spaces?
adamweld|7 years ago
While compiling great resources in one place is a good stop-gap I'd love to hear some ideas about how we can move towards a Web where people are rewarded for creating original content and putting effort into their work, rather than the current mess of clickbait and rehosted/paraphrased content. Doing a Google search for a technical topic is much less effective now than in the past, by my reckoning.
mathinpens|7 years ago
If those topics are in your wheelhouse there is definitely a ton of high quality original content from the advanced undergraduate level to the research level.
so maybe a lot of the internet is seo ranked shit show...but not all of it.
xfitm3|7 years ago
sampl|7 years ago
The goal is eventually something just like you described, kind of a crowd-sourced curriculum builder.
This version is rough and buggy, but would love everyone's thoughts/feedback (sam@directedworks.com)
https://superclass.co/
Edit: sign up for occasional email updates here: http://eepurl.com/dwgBnP
evanlivingston|7 years ago
Moter8|7 years ago
Perhaps make an entire "contact" page, I dislike mailto: links. It opens my company's preferred Email client called IBM Notes and it sucks.
Once you have your MVP, please add transitions/animations. The site is too instant so to say, when clicking a button you expect some small delay. Even if you pre-loaded this, it's sort of important.
Complexicate|7 years ago
It's a good idea. I'd like to see this succeed.
zbtaylor1|7 years ago
Malp|7 years ago
brightball|7 years ago
I think I remember seeing where Cornell offered a course structure where you’d do one course, all day, for 3 weeks and then move to the next. It was years ago, but I remember thinking I would have loved it.
colmvp|7 years ago
Also in the grand scheme of things, three weeks isn't a lot of time. Granted, I'm not a fast learner!
adamweld|7 years ago
[1] http://www.expertadmissions.com/ExpertAdmissionsBlog/tabid/7...
seanmcdirmid|7 years ago
amp108|7 years ago
metal13|7 years ago
https://twitter.com/intent/follow?original_referer=https%3A%...
JaredMcFey|7 years ago
lixtra|7 years ago
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dwcnnnghm|7 years ago
[0] https://metacademy.org
[1] https://learn-anything.xyz
[2] https://github.com/learn-anything/learn-anything/wiki/White-...
staystrong22|7 years ago
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