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As someone who went through a prepper episode in youth, I think this is worth underlining. I have a large digital archive of books and trade magazines, everything from bank industry primers for the oil industry to sewing patterns and "sewing theory". For a laugh with a friend, I admitted to having this still more than a decade after initial digital hoarding, and we went through some of them. One was a book from a hundred and some years ago titled something like "Woodworking Explained for Everyone"; and inside are pages and pages of complex greek formulas while the English-language context is written in a way largely incomprehensible to me. It would've taken me months to decipher the book and put anything into practice.

I just tell an LLM what I'm trying to do and it gives me 3 methods, explaining the pros and cons, and if I don't understand why it says something, I press about it. Even a local gemma-12b model can be pretty helpful, and in an era where we have so many cheap options for local energy generation and storage available, the case for hoarding digital textbooks/encyclopedias over an LLM is pretty weak.

That said, some old books are still very neat. We were reading through one called, I think it was something like the "grocer's encyclopedia", and it contains many very helpful thought-starters and beautiful and practical illustrations. LLMs are probably always going to disproportionately advantage non-visual learners in my lifetime, I think. Wikipedia, I think, is more focused on events than useful skills; I don't think Wikipedia would be very useful for "rebooting society"; it's more something to read for entertainment, or if for some reason you need to know which Treaty of London someone's referring to (but you could just ask an LLM that).



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