whatβs the app/site you learn the most from?
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I learn a lot from YouTube, ChatGPT, and the Chrome developer documentation.
Nowadays, Chat GPT π€
youtube
ChatGPT & Google
fireship.io
The one call βliving your lifeβ free and no phone needed!
stackoverflow.com
stackoverflow.com
none. putting my phone down and experiencing life has taught me the most
I learned happiness in doing physical art. creativity is real. All app/sites are same to me but art is meditative and clears your mind of digital garbage where you don't know who is telling the truths
only depends on the quality of the content and if you find someone supplying really good content.
For example, there is a lot of stuff which is good to know, for example https://inclinedbedtherapy.com . But there is quite a lot more stuff not widely known.
YouTube. It's nothing to do with the site specifically. It's that video and audio content like podcasts and talks are easy to consume, reduce blind spots and index into so much more.
Twitter ;)
We should be listening to you. Which app/site do you learn the most from?
Google and Wikipedia
When it's about bitcoin related technical news, then Stacker News, otherwise maybe watching interviews on Youtube would be there?
@jack you're shadow banned on Twitter
@npub1hq0k...f9mp is also shadow banned
Welcome to Linda's freedom of speech but not reach
Youtube.
GREAT QUESTION!!! ...I have to say, based on frequency, it is the news sites, because current events are literally ongoing. I love Bloomberg for markets, and local and national news for the weather patterns (natural disasters, extreme weather, pandemics are as costly as anything man-made, and usually costlier).
I think what news sites/apps have (for better and for worse) that is lacking in nostr and social messaging platforms is a cohesive narrative. And often our learning is interrupted by someone's comments who is not there to learn, but rather to debate or converse, or socialize/entertain. So, in a perfect app, I wish there was a chat gpt friendlier filter that could pull up news and allow me to ask questions to further shape the news I am getting access to. A friendly filter that feels like social interaction. Hope that makes sense... <33
X
Spotify podcasts
X for news
YouTube for learning different skills
Pinterest for some design ideas
Watching documentaries on art, music, and culture scenes for free on Tubi
Twitter. But hopefuly, #NOSTR when it's working better. Shadow ban is serious on twitter.
Honestly: props to @Adam Curry and Johncy. Wonder when Johncy gets a nostril npub?
No Agenda Show
No Agenda Show
No Agenda, twice weekly media deconstruction podcast by Adam Curry & John C. Dvorak.
YouTube
YouTube for business ideas, IG for food hacks, ChatGPT for everything...
YouTube
Depends. Been using Coursera & MS learn lately, but I'll say I learn the most from YouTube
Reading source code on Github
I picked up a great deal from Russia Today actually. I found bitcoin there watching the Max Keister show and also a different perspective on the news. I know that is likely a deeply unpopular opinion today but a few years back it had things nobody else had.
Spotify because of podcasts
Substack :D
@La Crypta ->this spanish discord comunity
Where are you
Twitter, YouTube, Arxiv are some
It used to be YouTube/Wikipedia. Now it's ChatGPT 4 by far.
ChatGPT
X
I also learn a lot about nutrition from your posts/ videos! Lately ππ«
man pages, project websites, public chats, social media(mostly mastodon), youtube, lbry, peertube and a good epub&pdf reader ^^
Twitter
Whatβs yours?
Probably YouTube
Interesting question, interesting answers.
View quoted note β
Hacker News
YouTube then Spotify podcasts
Cyborg is my teacher
The track at the local college where I run 3x per week. All the ideas come to me on the walk home.
HackerNews and Science.org
Academy of Ideas
this ycombinator ass post cmon man
For the last months, getairchat.com has been my favourite.
Twitter still is the place to go for the latest updates on any topic.
YouTube mostly, I have it on in the background and most of my reccomendations are video essays on interesting topics.
There are online courses like Coursera and MOOCs like Edx.org. They mostly teach by recording lectures via embedded videos, but also incorporate lab equipment, industrial equipment, online compilers/interpreters, quizes, text, and games to help students learn the same content via different methods.