There are more than 37000000 YouTube channels out there.

Here are 12 channels that will teach you new skills:

1. Ted-Ed

Ted-Ed provides a wide range of classes, from visual arts to mathematics, health studies, and business. Each video features entertaining animations, with lessons taught in a fun way using interesting examples.

https://t.co/bKi8KxDRld
2. Crash Course

This channel teaches a wide range of subjects such as world history, biology, and even psychology.
https://t.co/9qJ1AdBs5i
3. The Coding Train

If you’ve been wanting to learn how to code, The Coding Train is a great place to start.
The videos are detailed, easy to understand, and even funny.

https://t.co/wMuOh0aHtJ
4. Terrible Writing Advice

This channel teaches you to be a better writer by (very sarcastically) telling you how not to write.

https://t.co/FITfRyroxJ
5. Khan Academy

This channel has provided tutoring in subjects such as math, science, computing, and economics.

https://t.co/GAXU8CpoNt
6. Ali Abdaal

His YouTube channel includes a full playlist on how he uses Notion encompassing note-taking, creating workflows, and how to use Notion as a resonance calendar.

https://t.co/RbwY4chtaj
7. Neville Medhora – Kopywriting Kourse

The channel is regularly updated and features numerous copywriting tips, reviews, interviews, and general copywriting and marketing updates.

https://t.co/qUYg6jqB1z
8. Neil Patel

Learn Digital Marketing.
As the co-founder of two reputable companies, Crazy Egg and Neil Patel Digital, Neil Patel happens to be one of the most brilliant minds in the digital marketing scene.

https://t.co/6vEQXLQxMk
9. Roberto Blake – Always Be Creating

This channel’s primary focus includes graphic design, social media, photography, unboxing videos, Vlogs, and related areas, and monetization of these skills.

https://t.co/RC6Ddr5oJZ
10. Skillshare

This channel is perfect for those of us with side hustles and ambitions to learn more and expand our knowledge sets.
It’s also ideal for solopreneurs.

https://t.co/GIWeNrXcyE
11. Bryan Elliott – Behind the Brand

Interviews from business founders, start-up founders, C-suite execs, YouTube gurus, and others to find out what goes on behind the scenes of their business and brand.

https://t.co/G0w7nL6NYx
12. Alex Hormozi

If you want to learn sales or scaling a business, study Alex–he's a master at it.
His channel is worth binge-watching and will make you wonder how all this valuable content is free.

https://t.co/GuNkPrENgf
Study mathematics to understand physics

Study physics to understand chemistry

Study chemistry to understand biology

Study biology to understand psychology

Study psychology to understand economics

Study economics and philosophy to be free

Buy Now 👇
https://t.co/oUbZmLxQJt
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A brief analysis and comparison of the CSS for Twitter's PWA vs Twitter's legacy desktop website. The difference is dramatic and I'll touch on some reasons why.

Legacy site *downloads* ~630 KB CSS per theme and writing direction.

6,769 rules
9,252 selectors
16.7k declarations
3,370 unique declarations
44 media queries
36 unique colors
50 unique background colors
46 unique font sizes
39 unique z-indices

https://t.co/qyl4Bt1i5x


PWA *incrementally generates* ~30 KB CSS that handles all themes and writing directions.

735 rules
740 selectors
757 declarations
730 unique declarations
0 media queries
11 unique colors
32 unique background colors
15 unique font sizes
7 unique z-indices

https://t.co/w7oNG5KUkJ


The legacy site's CSS is what happens when hundreds of people directly write CSS over many years. Specificity wars, redundancy, a house of cards that can't be fixed. The result is extremely inefficient and error-prone styling that punishes users and developers.

The PWA's CSS is generated on-demand by a JS framework that manages styles and outputs "atomic CSS". The framework can enforce strict constraints and perform optimisations, which is why the CSS is so much smaller and safer. Style conflicts and unbounded CSS growth are avoided.