What's the point of your tutorial? Why would people come to read it when there exists much better alternatives; not only in substance but also in shape ( reading the unformatted code on your page hurts my eyes) ?
Originally posted by another user
How asm worked was it gave names to certain combinations of machine codes. Machine codes were entirely comprised of numbers. Now by using these named combinations programmers were better able to comprehend a code by looking at it, but not very much was done without the need to make massive calculations regarding where one wanted to go about with the code. Assembly was extremely fast but it was also extremely difficult to program in. Assembly took a long time to master in order for one to write complex codes in it. Thus, the need arose for a language that would be both fast and more human friendly.
Why are you using past tense?
ASM still exists and is still used. You kinda use it. Most compilers just turn your C code into ASM. Also it is still used in some case for optimization purposes; in embedded computing for example where people deal with very specific hardware so they might be able to do a better job than their compiler.
Not to mention your tutorial is nothing much more than a patchwork of definitions you copy pasted from random websites
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( didn't bother to investigate more although I suspect that those aren't the only things you scraped from somewhere else without giving credits or sourcing! )
It is fine though since there is no point in redefining common notions when it was already well done by other people and is widely accessible to everyone. Which brings back to my first point.
What's the point of your tutorial?
I see that you hosted it via Linked In.
Don't you think that showing off projects instead of writing tutorials would work better to reach whatever goal you're trying to achieve
?