Other than that, here's an attempt to sum it up briefly:
1. Polymorphic values are actually functions
2. Functions are recalculated each time, while values are shared
3. Therefore, if you _think_ you have a value, but you actually have a function, that might be the source of hidden performance problems
4. Therefore, we force things that _look_ like values, i.e. `x =` to be non-polymorphic (i.e. monomorphic), unless they have a type signature.