Anyone that claims they have never thrown a chain in their life has not ran a saw long enough period.
Good thing noone here has made that claim.Anyone that claims they have never thrown a chain in their life has not ran a saw long enough period.
This guy knows what he’s talking about. I got on the same train as you with the books instead of YouTube a little while ago now, and you’re absolutely right, when you learn something from a book you learn all of it. And you learned it from somebody who is smart enough to write, and get published, a book. and so far they’re not putting ads in books, but that can’t be too far off I guess.I used to use youtube for learning how to do things, but now I've tended towards books.
That's not to say youtube is useless; but the tangible value is having a video, and youtube seems to have a monopoly on that. It's very helpful seeing a video of something being done, that no amount of writing can describe.
That said, when you're looking to do something more complex, books offer the advantage of being comprehensive in nature, written by a single author, with a single coherent idea. Additionally you, the reader, are the customer for the books. Thus you don't find stupid clickbait **** or other psychological attention sucks. As an example, what might be a single sentence in a book "Do this to prevent this", on youtube turns into 10 different videos with ludicrous titles "95% of people don't know this", "Your house is a ticking time bomb unless you do this", "Experts say to do this, tips to save you hundreds $$$".
The comprehensive nature of books is a big help too: if you're doing a project and have many different things you need/want guidance on the book will cover it in a logical and methodical way, whereas youtube you have to dig through like 10 different videos by 10 different people all doing things their way and re-explaining the basics every time (along with "please like and susbcribe").
Finally too, with books you get the "teach a man to fish" effect, so for example with my most recent example I was working with, I had a plumbing book, and in the introduction all the basics were laid out: types of plumbing material, their history, their advantages/disadvantages, the types of fittings that go with what type of plumbing material, etc. Youtube videos will only tell you how to do the 1 thing you're trying to do i.e. how to crimp a PEX pipe, and even then it's a shitshow of ads, opinions, and sometimes something useful. Having read the chapter on plumbing materials made my trip to the plumbing section at the hardware store way more elegant, and I didn't need to pull up my phone and search for an answer constantly.
Bonus: books don't spy on you.
[edit]
This was written like ****, I apologize, I might be hungover. The idea is I tried to convey is still there.
Anyone can publish a book.And you learned it from somebody who is smart enough to write, and get published, a book.
Getting published only means someone thought it would sell well enough to be willing to spend the money to publish it. Maybe the author themselves.This guy knows what he’s talking about. I got on the same train as you with the books instead of YouTube a little while ago now, and you’re absolutely right, when you learn something from a book you learn all of it. And you learned it from somebody who is smart enough to write, and get published, a book. and so far they’re not putting ads in books, but that can’t be too far off I guess.
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