Has anyone gotten the (pricey - $25) Anki iphone app? Does the app still make it easy to look up the Less Wrong deck?
Alternately, has someone tried importing the deck into some (cheaper) SRS app?
I have the Anki iphone app. Considering the utility and convenience it provides, the price is negligible. For comparison, at a private college, tuition/# of classes ~= $200 / class, so as I use anki for schoolwork, it easily pays for itself.
If you do any sort of utility calculation for products you use, a lot of times convenience will trump price by orders of magnitude. This is one of those cases.
Anki decks can be exported into the lowest-common-denominator format among SRS apps: tab-delimited text files. They’re supported by pretty much every app worth using, and if they aren’t, easy to transform them into something the app does understand.
From the discussions on the Mnemosyne-proj-user mailing list which I didn’t pay any attention to, there are apparently a number of free SRS apps for the iPhone.
(What isn’t usually all that portable is the markup for formatting, images, audio, etc. But I don’t think any of these cards are likely to involve much of that.)
I know a full featured app is much better, but Anki Online is completely free, and accessible via most browsers—although it requires an internet connection. Any deck you sync from the desktop (or other) version of Anki should be available via AnkiOnline.
Has anyone gotten the (pricey - $25) Anki iphone app? Does the app still make it easy to look up the Less Wrong deck? Alternately, has someone tried importing the deck into some (cheaper) SRS app?
I have the Anki iphone app. Considering the utility and convenience it provides, the price is negligible. For comparison, at a private college, tuition/# of classes ~= $200 / class, so as I use anki for schoolwork, it easily pays for itself.
If you do any sort of utility calculation for products you use, a lot of times convenience will trump price by orders of magnitude. This is one of those cases.
Anki decks can be exported into the lowest-common-denominator format among SRS apps: tab-delimited text files. They’re supported by pretty much every app worth using, and if they aren’t, easy to transform them into something the app does understand.
From the discussions on the Mnemosyne-proj-user mailing list which I didn’t pay any attention to, there are apparently a number of free SRS apps for the iPhone.
(What isn’t usually all that portable is the markup for formatting, images, audio, etc. But I don’t think any of these cards are likely to involve much of that.)
If someone were to post a link to Divia’s Guide to Words as tab-delimited text, I would look through it.
http://divia.posterous.com/less-wrong-sequences-as-tab-delimited-text-fi
I know a full featured app is much better, but Anki Online is completely free, and accessible via most browsers—although it requires an internet connection. Any deck you sync from the desktop (or other) version of Anki should be available via AnkiOnline.
Wow. I have a free Anki app on my Android phone.