Because it's a lot more efficient than traditional study methods, you can either greatly decrease your time spent studying, or greatly increase the amount you learn. Anyone who needs to remember things in their daily life can benefit from Anki. Since it is content-agnostic and supports images, audio, videos and scientific markup (via LaTeX), the possibilities are endless. For example: * Learning a language * Studying for medical and law exams * Memorizing people's names and faces * Brushing up on geography * Mastering long poems * Even practicing guitar chords!
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daviding@daviding:matrix.org Anki flashcards? New to me. https://apps.ankiweb.net/ I had followed Paul Hibbitts on his work with Grav, and now he teaches docsify, too. AnkiDroid is a new addition. Oh, and if anyone is curious in what online #SFU CMPT-363 for Summer 2022 looks like... well here you go! https://canvas.sfu.ca/courses/69678
https://paulhibbitts.github.io/cmpt-363/#/222/home?embedded=true&hidegitlink=true
While it involves a new open source app (AnkiDroid Flashcards) changes are minor, one being some schedule tweaks as shown at https://docs.google.com/document/d/100Xce8gJCQAVwtJ82ztzgwN1a1SFR_-EdnCju-5qfhs/edit?usp=sharing​ https://mastodon.social/@hibbittsdesign/108391979225024786
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https://ankiweb.net/account/register
AnkiWeb is a free companion to the computer version of Anki. AnkiWeb can be used to review online when you don't have access to your home computer, and can be used to keep your cards synchronized across multiple machines. AnkiWeb is intended to be used in conjunction with the computer version of Anki. While it is possible to create basic text-only cards and review them using only AnkiWeb, to download shared decks, take advantage of multimedia features and so on, you will need to use the free computer version as well. If you have not used Anki before, please start with the computer version .