It would be great to copy the text of the doc into this post! (or signal this is a linkpost, but I think having the text in-post is more helpful).
I’d also find it useful to know how specifically you think your list differs from Tessa or Gregory’s—you mention it’s more concise /​ friendly to newcomers but it would be helpful to know in what ways—e.g. have you put in more videos or shorter articles or something? I am often forwarding resources to people, so it’s helpful to know this kind of info.
To your first point, I’ve modified the title to signal that this is a linkpost.
To your second point, this list is more concise in that it’s only ~35 items right now, which compares to ~60 in Greg’s list and ~90 in Tessa’s. It may be more friendly to newcomers in the sense that it may just be less overwhelming due to its brevity, and it includes fewer dense governmental reports and academic papers.
But overall I think different lists will work for different people, and for whatever reason when I made this list this is the presentation that struck me as aesthetically fitting the bill. Other people may disagree about which format is more useful, and my guess is that ultimately they’re just complementary.
It would be great to copy the text of the doc into this post! (or signal this is a linkpost, but I think having the text in-post is more helpful).
I’d also find it useful to know how specifically you think your list differs from Tessa or Gregory’s—you mention it’s more concise /​ friendly to newcomers but it would be helpful to know in what ways—e.g. have you put in more videos or shorter articles or something? I am often forwarding resources to people, so it’s helpful to know this kind of info.
Thanks for the feedback, Vaidehi.
To your first point, I’ve modified the title to signal that this is a linkpost.
To your second point, this list is more concise in that it’s only ~35 items right now, which compares to ~60 in Greg’s list and ~90 in Tessa’s. It may be more friendly to newcomers in the sense that it may just be less overwhelming due to its brevity, and it includes fewer dense governmental reports and academic papers.
But overall I think different lists will work for different people, and for whatever reason when I made this list this is the presentation that struck me as aesthetically fitting the bill. Other people may disagree about which format is more useful, and my guess is that ultimately they’re just complementary.
Thanks Chris! This is helpful.