I've been in Japan for quite a while now and had pretty much no interest in learning Japanese other than the intial kana and kanji stumblings. My conversation isn't bad though. Someone mentioned aikido in the last couple of days somewhere? I started with karate-doh, then aikido and kobudo. When I got to Japan I joined an aikido dojo and started iaido. I'm strictly aikido now, hence, aikiboy
I started working with a guy who decided to study for the level 2 test and he wanted me to study with him. I felt bad cause I've been here way longer so I decided to do the test. Actual studying started November '06. I didn't bother to study the 200 grammar points, just worked on vocab and I missed passing by .02%. Anyway, while studying the vocab with excel@japanese, I bumped into a friend at Starbucks and told him a funny way I remembered words, not kanji. He told me there was a whole book like that, and I thought it was a different book I'd seen and wasn't interested in.
But I got the study bug and had downloaded a ton of free Japanese stuff in the fall. I finally opened the Heisig file in January '07 and realized that this is what Joe was talking about. I did about 100 kanji sitting at school that day and thought it was amazing. Then I discovered SRS with Memory Lifter and I started the method in February '07. I typed my ENTIRE list of kanji, keywords and stories. What a struggle that was!
Then Anki came about and I started my reviews from scratch in May '07. Then perhaps there was an update or my deck, not being proper and including primitives caused a problem and I had to restart my reviews from scratch again after about 1000 in. (Thanks resolve for the many band-aids on my deck!) But I didn't give up and I finished at the end of last summer.
My new goal is to continue the Heisig reviews and work on the Kanji in Context frequent vocab/kanji list and tackle the grammar and perhaps next year shoot for level one.
Oh, so the point of the post

, Joe mentioned it briefly but bittorrent gets the credit!

BTW, after much hounding on my part, I convinced two people to try Heisig. One finished Book one and the other stopped at 500. But no matter how hard I try to convince people, no one has taken up using Anki. The one guy who finished spent 10,000 yen ordering special precut cards to write all the kanji on. He DID NOT do the Leitner system though. Go figure.