As a television programme, this is excellent - makes use of short, intensive sections, presenting the views of those who were there, who invented the personal computer because "We didn't know it couldn't be done" (Steve Wozniak).
However, the various uploaded clips, and there are too many to watch them all, seem to be the parts of the original that particularly appealed to an individual, and the message from them is not necessarily what the original presenter was trying to say.
The biggest factor for me about this was the speed at which it all occurred. We cannot possibly foresee all of the impacts on education and life in general, simply because these are still changing on daily basis: Books came into being gradually from individual manuscripts (hand-written) to bound collections, to printed work, over the period of approximately 1700 years. Computers came into being from flashing lights and switches to a real usable GUI between 1975-1980. The growth and change is almost too much to understand, and it is not surprising in that sense that learning theories have not kept up with technological advances.
I may comment more when I have seen a few more clips
Triumph of the Nerds
Triumph of The Nerds