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Welcome and good luck with your studies. I got here when I stumbled onto a TextFugu vid on Youtube.
Wow! There is a wealth of stuff here! I spent a fast hour there learning things. I’ll be back.
It looks interesting, I’m going to give it a try even tho it may be a bit advanced for me.
Well it’s news to me! Thanks for sharing. I’ll check it out.
Welcome! You have quite a varied background in 日本語 !! I think many of us have tried other methods and have landed here for one reason or another.
Good luck!There is a link to a PDF file named “Kanji Recall Workbook” on the Downloads page
I think I can copy it here: http://www.textfugu.com/downloads/extras/kanjirecall.pdfWelcome and good luck. Keep at ir a bit each day!
Welcome! I found that keeping a diary is a great idea. It helps me do something every day because I just hate leaving a blank spot!
To deal with the Kanji stories not in the Anki files I copied them into my daily diary which I keep as a word doc on a flash drive. With bookmarking I can get to them quickly of needed. It’s also easy to review them until I know them well enough to be of use.
My studies here were disrupted a few days but it gave me a chance to go back to my Michel Thomas Method lessons for some review.Back to working hard, I do very much appreciate and like the new stories attached to the Kanji Vocab. Fantastic! I look forward to my studies every day.
I’m looking at this like a semester break. ^_^
Seriously tho since I’m only in the middle of season 2 I plan to remove the old decks and download the new ones. For my level it seems like the best alternative of the ones that ルイ suggested.Would it be possible to include a creation date by each deck in the download? That way we’d know if we had the latest version. I keep track of the date I download in my daily work diary. Not quite sure what decks to redo yet so I’m sort’a waiting until things settle down.
@huw: My thots exactly! ^_^Very good! Post some pix for us!
Fantastic motivation.
To answer your question MrO., I taught computer science (programming, database, applications) at Penn State. I got my Comp Sci graduate degree in 1976 so after that I had to learn every new thing I needed on my own. I also had a graduate degree in mathematics in 1968 and taught mathematics and statistics there as well. Programming is a young person’s game! It’s very intense (as you know) and eventually grinds a person down which is why I don’t write programs any more.
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