Personally I don’t watch videos on software (except for skimming tutorials) since I prefer to learn about topics with written tutorials or Reddit. Software influencers have been on the rise for the past several years, everything from grifters claiming they can help you start an SWE career, to ones that make tutorials and showcases on software.

I’m more interested in hearing about the later. I came across found this discussion: What can we learn from Neovim’s rise in popularity? : emacs, with comments claiming that Youtubers like ThePrimeagen have helped a lot with making Neovim popular. I crossposted it to r/neovim and many so far many users there said that they found Neovim through ThePrimeagen’s videos.

  • frezik@midwest.social
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    16 days ago

    A lot of tutorials are video when they used to be text. This makes it harder to reference specific parts. It also makes it harder to copy code out of the tutorial, though you can argue that’s an advantage.

    • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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      16 days ago

      I’d also argue it makes it harder to use, period: something that takes me 10 seconds to read somehow ends up being a 5 minute video, of which 90% is fluff that’s not related to the problem.

      I’ve yet to land on a tutorial video that gets to the point and doesn’t feel the need to waste a ton of time introducing themselves, a paragraph about what we’re doing, asking me to subscribe, talking about their sponsor and so on.

      I lament the death of the text-based tutorial and strongly dislike the youtube format video.

      • pm_me_titties@lemmynsfw.com
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        16 days ago

        Also it’s easier to skip through text, than it is to skip through video. I can read way faster than people talk, and most of the time I at least kinda know what I’m looking for. E.g. I often skip the question part on SO and see if the code in the answer looks like what I’m looking for, or maybe it’s something I already tried and didn’t work.

  • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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    16 days ago

    Most Linux nerds I know aren’t watching a lot of Twitch streams or Youtube videos. Maybe I’m old school. I talk to other people (in the rare case I’m in a group of nerds) and they’d say “You really should try Neovim”. Or I read about it in some feed, blog post, forum… Or I try all editors. Or I’m looking for a replacement and get to know there’s a better fork. Yeah and maybe a Podcast. I think that’d count as influencers. Other than that, I’d say video influencers don’t work that well with the kind of people I know.

  • Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.ca
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    16 days ago

    Personally I like consuming all the mediums of information as they all have different strengths. Peertube videos are easy to digest as you can watch passively and see software demos.

  • TheV2@programming.dev
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    15 days ago

    If we’re talking about people who simply make video content about software development, then the biggest impact I see is a bigger reach for any tool that needs to be seen in action or simply sounds too strange on paper. In recent years HTMX was probably affected the most.

    I see that a lot of people boil it down to tutorials, but there is so much more content about software development.