No, I don't mean that the news media are biased politically. I mean that authors are biased by the media they use.
I'm learning about support vector machines (SVMs). There are a lot of books and articles written on SVMs. There are also a whole lot of video lectures on SVMs at videolectures.net (see "kernel methods").
People go into much greater detail in lectures than in text. I like to work with text. I'd like to have a text on SVMs that goes into as much detail as videos on SVMs usually do, and works out the ideas behind the concepts as thoroughly, but no such text exists. For some reason, giving a 5-hour lecture series in which you describe the motivations, applications, and work out the mathematical details is acceptable; but writing a text of the same level of detail, which might take only 2 hours to read, is not.
Perhaps this is because writers are motivated to keep pagecounts low. But pagecount no longer matters with electronic articles. Yet writers still don't want to explain things thoroughly. They certainly aren't saving their readers any time by leaving out intermediate steps. A longer article would take less time to read (and possibly less time to write). Another problem with the pagecount theory is that texts routinely include footnotes and appendices, contributing to the pagecount; yet relegate them to the back of the book, as if embarassed of them, despite the fact that this makes them very difficult to use.
It's especially bad in math, in which writers have a long tradition of deliberately concealing difficult steps and leaving them "as an exercise to the reader". For some reason it is considered bad form to write out all of the steps in a proof, even if adding one or two lines could save the reader five minutes of puzzling. I read an electronic article yesterday where the author said, "These two equations are actually equivalent. Do you see why?"
I think people have adopted a set of cultural biases about what is appropriate in lectures vs. in writing by simply counting observations, without thinking about the systematic sample bias. Speakers speak the way they've seen other speakers speak, without recollecting that most of those speakers were instructors. Technical writers, meanwhile, are picking up their cues from authors of textbooks, which are written with the assumption that a person will be on hand to take you through the details; and applying them in situations where no such person will be available.
Audio and video lectures are much less annoying when you play them faster - I find I'm able to listen to most video content at 2.5-3 times normal speed, and most audio at about twice normal speed, both with increased retention (I get less bored, so my mind wanders less).
A couple of time-saving hacks related to speeding up audio or video lectures:
QuickTime is great at tempo shifting video and audio to play it back faster without shifting the pitch ("chipmunking"). Look for QuickTime's A/V controls, and "Playback speed". You have to be sitting at your computer to use this, which brings me to…
If you use a portable media player, PodShifter will shift (speedup without chipmunking) podcast feeds. If your audio isn't in a feed, HuffDuffer will make individual online media files into a feed, to which you can subscribe using PodShifter. PodShifter is free to use. (I have a financial interest in PodShifter, but this comment doesn't feel spammy to me - please downvote it if you disagree.)
The open source Soundtouch library includes soundstretch, which can do audio tempo shifting locally. Audacity can also do local shifting (look for Effects > Tempo shift).
Is there software that will compress the empty spaces between words and sentences more than the words and sentences?