I've read the first section of the first installment of this article and it LOOKS like it's going to be very helpful for me - because it appears the author has an understanding of what holds most new hams back. I expect this will continue on with helpful advice and information for "getting started" as well as how to help others get started.
And it appears to be starting off as a good guide for getting folks started in radio, but not necessarily a good ham resource. Seems to be a lot of advice about STARTING on setting up and operating GMRS/MURS types of setups, where channels are programmed and fixed, in order to get on the air and start learning behaviors before diving into hardware challenges.