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No bullshit guide to math and physics, v4.0

29 points| ivansavz | 12 years ago |minireference.com | reply

11 comments

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[+] gms7777|12 years ago|reply
Maybe I'm cynical (or not cynical enough) but I always tend to cast a wary eye at product marketed like this:

>You don't need to read thou­sands of pages to learn me­chan­ics and cal­cu­lus, so why are the re­quired text­books so long? Text­book pub­lish­ers pro­duce such large text­books so they can charge you $150 for each text­book. They want to get $300 from you to teach you the ba­sics. That's not cool!

It comes off the same way as infomercials for "One health secret that doctors don't want you to know!".

[+] ivansavz|12 years ago|reply
I know what you mean, but in this case there is a real "cartel" thing going on. Professors decide what book will be used for the class and students have to buy it regardless of price and quality.

Imagine you were a publisher and you have a captive audience of hundreds of thousands of students. Would you make a good lean book and sell it for $30, or would you make a bloated book with full-page color images and repetitive explanations? Assume in both cases, the sale is guaranteed...

That's the "injustice" I'm trying to fix, but it is a bit of an uphill battle because first-year students assume that the bigger (thicker) books must be better because they have "more stuff" in them.

[+] gingham|12 years ago|reply
I get where this thought comes from, but I have to say that I have this book (though I used mostly version 3) and it has been a lifesaver. I love it and highly recommend it to anyone learning first year calc at uni.
[+] ivansavz|12 years ago|reply
Author here.

I've been working on a lot of things (exercises, phys.js simulations, new free tutorials) and planning a bit launch, but now I realize that the fall semester is almost over so I decided to launch v4.0 ASAP.

Maybe my book will help some students who are freaking out about their upcoming calculus and mechanics finals!

[+] faviouz|12 years ago|reply
I've been waiting for v4 for a while now. Looks great! I think I'll finally buy it. :)

The PDF preview at https://gumroad.com/l/noBSmath appears to be the old version of the book. You should fix that.

[+] ivansavz|12 years ago|reply
The link is actually the same as for v3.0---I just replaced the file with the new one. So if have the gumroad link to the v3.0 file, it should now point to the updated version.
[+] dergachev|12 years ago|reply
Congrats to Ivan and team, this update reflects many months of work and a lot of improvements. Hope many students who are trying to learn a semester's worth of calculus in just the next few weeks can benefit from this update.
[+] shmageggy|12 years ago|reply
Why is this here and why is it getting upvoted? All I see is a sales page with no real content on it. Maybe the guide isn't bullshit but this submission is.
[+] ivansavz|12 years ago|reply
Hi,

Actually there is content-a-plenty. The preview contains one third of the book (the first few chapters), and I have some nice FREE tutorials on mechanics and linear algebra which might help out students:

http://cnd.mcgill.ca/~ivan/miniref/miniref_v4_preview.pdf

http://cnd.mcgill.ca/~ivan/miniref/mech_in_7_pages.pdf

http://cnd.mcgill.ca/~ivan/miniref/linear_algebra_in_3_pages...

But, yes, it is a "launch page" in a way.... but I think my "product" is genuinely interesting for hackers and students who were busy hacking all semester long and now have exams coming their way ;)

[+] dataminded|12 years ago|reply
I am really glad this was posted here and plan to pick up a copy.

People post landing pages on HN all of the time, I'm not sure how this is any different.