Fine points all and not ones I disagree with.
However whilst there is a lot of information on social media these days it tends to be of the quick snap, post, view and forgot variety or it’s a photo extracted (tellingly perhaps) from an old book.
It’s not proper record keeping though, archiving if you like, and its proper collated record keeping about courses and new projects and the like that down the line are important for historical, posterity, renovation/restoration/etc purposes and this aspect to me, and I not long ago put together a history book myself, is crucial. Not just collated records on paper either, but ones now stored digitally including videos.
And to read or hear why things were done the way they were can be most informative, imagine a video of Jones and MacKenzie discussing ANGC or OTM discussing TOC. Podcasts (and videos) should in time be useful in this respect.
There’s a saying that history tends to repeat itself. Lessons can be learnt. And who better to learn the history lessons from than those who are actually making it.
Atb