[work]: Video2brain
Founded in Graz, Austria, initially focused on providing in-depth training for software in German, French, and Spanish. It quickly gained a reputation for its "Learn by Video" series, which often paired comprehensive video instruction with printed guides to cater to different learning styles.
However, the story of video2brain is also a lesson in the consolidation of the tech industry. In 2014, the software giant acquired the platform. Shortly thereafter, video2brain’s content was migrated and absorbed into Lynda.com (which LinkedIn had also acquired). Eventually, following Microsoft’s acquisition of LinkedIn, the entire library became part of LinkedIn Learning . Today, the original video2brain brand has disappeared, but its DNA remains. video2brain
In the early 2010s, the landscape of online education was fragmented. Learners relied on scattered YouTube tutorials, expensive DVD-ROMs, or dense, uninspiring textbooks. It was into this gap that stepped, becoming a cornerstone for creative and technical professionals seeking structured, high-quality video training. Founded in Graz, Austria, initially focused on providing
curated a roster of star instructors who became celebrities in the niche world of creative software. Names like Sven Brencher , Maxim Jago (for Premiere Pro), and Iain Anderson became synonymous with quality. When you saw a video2brain thumbnail with their face on it, you knew you were about to learn the hidden "pro workflow" that YouTube wouldn't show you. In 2014, the software giant acquired the platform
) allows the finished part to be easily extracted from its mold without sticking or damage.