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Videos Should Be Organized / Curated #78

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gbaz opened this issue Feb 16, 2015 · 3 comments
Open

Videos Should Be Organized / Curated #78

gbaz opened this issue Feb 16, 2015 · 3 comments

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@gbaz
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gbaz commented Feb 16, 2015

As per Chris we should kick off with a very friendly SPJ lecture or such, and perhaps one other very intro video. From there, we can curate a selection of good representative talks, and ideally some sort of social mechanism for continuing to curate them manually over time.

@chrisdone
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Very good! Possibly, as with the Events section (not yet added but was planned in the mockup), it could possibly be managed from a wiki page, eventually.

@chrisdone chrisdone added this to the Scheduled work items milestone Feb 16, 2015
@gbaz
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gbaz commented Feb 16, 2015

Some ideas:

1:22 PM <raek> sclv: two favorites of mine: pipes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jdJGdA7AYs and HsQML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCSxWfUvi6o
1:23 PM <zerokarmaleft> sclv: wadler has a lecture series up on youtube, doesn't he?
1:23 PM <raek> sclv: oh, and I also really liked the Pipes and Conduit episode of the Haskell Cast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qn2Oc4vWoGg
1:24 PM <ReinH> sclv: Jekor's videos are good!
1:24 PM <mada> sclv: 'The Algebra of Algebraic Datatypes' was accessible and mindblowing to me as an absolute beginner: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YScIPA8RbVE
 <zerokarmaleft> sclv: also SPJ's adventure with types series at oregon state, though the latter half of the series isn't so beginner-oriented
1:25 PM <edwardk> the main ones i'd like to see on the front page are Cowley's "Abstractions for the Functional Roboticist" from NY Haskell, and Ranjit Jhala's LiquidHaskell talk from Boston Haskell
1:26 PM <edwardk> both of those are very compelling and accessible to newcomers
1:26 PM <edwardk> Cowley's talk is the best selling point i've seen for haskell it shows how we can use these formal methods in all sorts of 'real world' ways
1:26 PM <edwardk> and the LiquidHaskell talk gives a sense of how you can reason about code with refinement types, but he's very careful to avoid losing newcomers along the way
1:28 PM <edwardk> And it doesn't hurt that Cowley's talk has flying robots and fancy conveyor belts and computer vision and motion planning and all the sexy things roboticists do

(jekor: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLxj9UAX4Em-Ij4TKwKvo-SLp-Zbv-hB4B -- might be better under "Documentation")

@gbaz gbaz added the content label Feb 17, 2015
@cies
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cies commented Feb 22, 2015

It would be great if the videos could be marked as "beginner", "intermediate" and possibly even "advanced".

I think beginner videos are most important for this website, as people more acquainted with Haskell know where to find their infos and/or are look for specific topics.

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