I'm not sure how thoroughly you skimmed the book, but in the introduction as well as throughout, it claims to be a straight-forward guide for any sort of human, young or old man or woman, and that purpose is at much a fundamental survey of nutrition, exercise, and everything else a body needs as it is a refutation of all the misinformation out there. Considering the 'average' person assumes P90X and the Ab Circle are proper exercise and that dietary fat makes your body fat, that doesn't seem too outlandish a claim.
As you didn't learn anything new, I trust you are well-read in fitness and nutrition, but since being a professional computer user doesn't explicitly require physical fitness, this might actually be a pretty useful resource for some of the readers here. And even if it weren't, said readers are likely to have mothers, fathers, significant others or children who could benefit from it. It specifically declares itself an "owner's manual for the human body", not some sort of secret hard-living comrade method for muscle growth or whatever; since you are already versed, your response would be like a Mathematics Professor writing an amazon review for "Fundamentals of Algebra" and saying "this stuff is all rehashed, there's nothing here I haven't seen before". Or you know, for a programmer to slam a "Computers for Dummies" book as being too basic.
Anyway, I respect your opinion and appreciate you giving it a shot, but I feel like you either were looking for the wrong thing or just didn't look too hard. Possibly since it's free, you got what you paid for it.
By the way I'm the author. I'm not trying to make a secret of that or anything, I just didn't initially feel it was relevant to the discussion.
As you didn't learn anything new, I trust you are well-read in fitness and nutrition, but since being a professional computer user doesn't explicitly require physical fitness, this might actually be a pretty useful resource for some of the readers here. And even if it weren't, said readers are likely to have mothers, fathers, significant others or children who could benefit from it. It specifically declares itself an "owner's manual for the human body", not some sort of secret hard-living comrade method for muscle growth or whatever; since you are already versed, your response would be like a Mathematics Professor writing an amazon review for "Fundamentals of Algebra" and saying "this stuff is all rehashed, there's nothing here I haven't seen before". Or you know, for a programmer to slam a "Computers for Dummies" book as being too basic.
Anyway, I respect your opinion and appreciate you giving it a shot, but I feel like you either were looking for the wrong thing or just didn't look too hard. Possibly since it's free, you got what you paid for it.
By the way I'm the author. I'm not trying to make a secret of that or anything, I just didn't initially feel it was relevant to the discussion.