I have watched the videos you are referring to and I suggest simply that his views are, to say the least, not universally accepted. I personally know one lithic expert who does microscopic lab work for an archeology firm, to whom I mentioned these videos, who pronounced it be hooey, based on his own research and lab work. That doesn't mean that you can't, or even that you shouldn't, do it that way. If it works, it works and it doesn't make a whit whether anybody ever did it that way in the past or not. Frankly, I doubt that there is anything we can dream up today that wasn't tried in the past. If you like the idea of tool simplicity and want to do it Abo at the same time, try using hammer stones with antler pressure. The initial shaping and thinning (a good knapper can make exceptionally thin and handsome points just with hammer stone percussion) can be done using the same stone for percussion and abrading and, should you choose to finish with pressure, antler requires little to no abrading, depending on your technique.