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For about 4 months now, I have been using a both RevTK and jMemorize to learn and review Kanji. Even a couple months after completion, the number of characters to review is just taking too much time.
After playing with Anki a little, I think the spacing seems to be better. What I want to do is stop using RevTK and jMemorize, and just use Anki instead. I have finished RTK1, so I don't care about order.
My plan is to import all the cards and set the number of NEW cards to 100 a day.
My question is: what will be my equilibrium number of reviews like be in 2-3 months? Will it be about around 100 cards a day? 50 a day? I want to configure the Anki system so that I can reach an equilibrium level of around 50-70 cards, if possible. I know this is hard to answer because it also depends on my retention rate, but perhaps Anki users with some experience can give me some suggestions.
Thanks in advance.
Edited: 2008-12-09, 5:58 am
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You have to review in Anki a lot too.
If you do 50 cards a day, I think within two weeks you'll already be hitting the 100-200 reviews a day mark.
In 3 months it could be 200 - 400 a day depending on retention.
Edit: Also can I have the jMemorize deck XD I've been neglecting my RTK Anki reviews ever since the move to jMemorize >_>
Edited: 2008-12-09, 6:21 am
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Dang - you're moving in the other direction...
...maybe I should stay with jMemorize.
If I'm going to end up with 200 cards a day, maybe I should stay.
Anyone else have suggestions/experiences you can share?
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It wouldn't be that many if you set the initial intervals to much higher than usual values. Eg.
2: 10-25 days
3: 30-50 days
4: 60-90 days
Or less. Or more. The point would just be to throw the ones you're confidant in way into the future. Then I think you'd have sane reviews in a month or two.
But anyway doesn't this site have an export progress to Anki plugin?
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After your post, I just discovered Deck Properties -> Advanced Scheduling.
Can someone suggest settings which have worked well for you?
(ie settings which avoid piled-up reviews).
Thanks in advance.
(I will look into that RevTK to Anki plug-in)
Edit:
300 is still way too many. I'm nearing 40,000 reviews now (two notebook-full) - it was fun for a while, but I need to start focusing on really studying (other aspects) of Japanese...
Edited: 2008-12-09, 7:27 am
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I'm getting 80-150 a day in jMemorize using the Exponential Setting.
1
2
4
8
16
32...
Maybe I should stay with jMemorize for another month and see if the numbers drop.
I'll just ignore RevTK or I will go crazy with reviews.
---------------------------------
An aside: I wonder what the 10,000 sentences users are using? If they are using Anki, how do they avoid getting flooded with reviews?
I am a little worried because I started using Anki for its flexibility (via models), but I don't want to drown in reviews a month down the line.
Edited: 2008-12-09, 7:43 am
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Thanks, Squintox - I've reset jMemorize to space things out a little more!
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This thread has encouraged me to go back to my RTK Anki reviews.
Holy crap, 1,948 reviews XDD Time to get to work!
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Blegh, reviewing in Anki feels soo... heavy. >_>
I read your other thread about jMemorize and it looks like your deck was pre-made (since you have both RTK + RTK3), can you tell me where you got it from? It's not on the official website. Thanks!
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I know how you feel about Anki feeling heavy - I'm not crazy about it, because it seems to crash on my quite often, it's more complex than I usually like, and the GUI feels non-standard, but I am getting used to its quirks.
I got both the RTK1 file and RTK3 file by searching on the web. Usually, I google a combination of RTK, Heisig, csv, txt, etc... Mine are from two different sources. Besides the Kanji, my RTK1 has 3e, 4e, and 5e keywords and stroke count. My RTK3 has 5e, stroke count, and reading.
I don't know where my original source files are (they were probably csv or xls) - all the data is in a personal MySQL database now.
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I love Anki's feeling. (If you have crash problems, you know, you can report it and get it fixed...)
I started out with kanji and Anki, I added them manually and built my deck from the ground up. Very cool how after 5 and a half months I have passed 4000 cards, all of which I added on my own.
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You know what I hate about Anki? It's overdependance on tons of extra libraries and plugins for python. Installing it on slackware is a MESS. I've compiled QT4 for over 20 minutes now :/
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I was kind of irked with Anki about a month ago, but now I'm actually pretty happy with it. When I looked around at the alternatives, I realized that I was totally spoiled. Then again, I like having a program with that degree of customization available. If I want to add 14 fields to each fact, then I can freely do it. Fun stuff. (Not that I'd go that far, though.)
And when Damien changed the review models, he listened to my (and other peoples') arguments to allow us to choose from the review order we use. So you can choose from older cards due first, newer cards due first, cards come in as they're due, and random order.
The result is that program is even better than it was before, because now you can review with whatever priority you like.
I also like the stripped-down keitai interface, which I use on my iPhone quite a bit.
I'd say Anki is what you make of it. It's not going to be all sunshine and rainbows-- that's what iKnow is for. Based on my stats, it's done an excellent job of helping me remember things in spite of myself.
And if you don't like something, tell Damien. He does listen if you make a rational argument.
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re: crashes - they are erratic (but usually during adds), so I have learned to save often.
re: platforms - I have installed it on Vista without any headaches. Haven't tried it on a Mac or Ubuntu, yet. From your experiences, it seems like I should avoid Linux installs. I'm not crazy about its dependence on Python either (may be the reason for many quirks), but as long as it works, no complaints...
re: iPhone - thx for the tip. I think I finally have iAnki working now on an iPod Touch. It was pretty clever leveraging Safari/browser technology. Will definitely play around with it.
One good thing for Anki seems to be the active developers supporting it. My other SRS program, jMemorize, is essentially in stasis. Luckily, I don't have many complaints about that program.
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Yeah, the best SRS is the one that you will use the most often.
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I have actually migrated to anki for reviews - well, not completely migrated, since I use the reviews on this site as well. My anki cards I use for Japanese keywords. I began adding 20-30 a day several months ago, and my reviews are around 50 a day right now. However, if you are putting in the English keywords, you can probably add them faster, and just advance them very quickly, since you know them already.
I find using anki reviews for Japanese and this site for english complement each other nicely.
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I like anki too. I had some troubles, but every one of them has been solved. The development is very active.