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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? A little bit of poetic light entertainment. Post 302904307 by vbe on Tuesday 3rd of June 2014 12:13:14 PM
Old 06-03-2014
At the time I was studying Theology... and ordered for my at the time wife a Sinclair QL...
When she left 2 years later I found myself with the QL not knowing what to do with it... Took me another 3 years to find an interest and then I started programming in superbasic...
 

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ANKI(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   ANKI(1)

NAME
anki - flashcard program for language learning DESCRIPTION
Anki is a program designed to help you remember facts (such as words and phrases in a foreign language) as easily, quickly and efficiently as possible. To do this, it tracks how well you remember each fact, and uses that information to optimally schedule review times. With a minimal amount of effort, you can greatly increase the amount of material you remember, making study more productive, and more fun. Anki is based on a theory called spaced repetition. In simple terms, it means that each time you review some material, you should wait longer than last time before reviewing it again. This maximizes the time spent studying difficult material and minimizes the time spent reviewing things you already know. The concept is simple, but the vast majority of memory trainers and flashcard programs out there either avoid the concept all together, or implement inflexible and suboptimal methods that were originally designed for pen and paper. Anki's primary target is people studying Japanese, and Japanese native speakers studying English. However, it can be used to remember any- thing at all, and there are some users who are studying Chinese and possibly other languages with it. OPTIONS
anki does not take command line options. Its interface is entirely graphical. SEE ALSO
Anki home page: <http://ichi2.net/anki/index.html> Community support thread: <http://forum.koohii.com/viewtopic.php?id=556&p=1> AUTHOR
anki was written by Damien Elmes <anki@ichi2.net>. This manual page was written by Nicholas Breen <nbreen@ofb.net>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others). August 11, 2007 ANKI(1)
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