I honestly don’t know. I would say quite much, but it does not feel like that: I do not review all my cards at one time in the day (I have notifications periodically nagging me if there are still due cards, so I don’t forget, and they aren’t too much bother) Another nice trick is to make more, smaller decks. When I see that there are 120 cards in one deck for review, I am not that ecstatic about that. If those same cards are split into 4 decks with 30-30 cars, I don’t even think about it. Generally, 20 cards are play, they don’t even register, and 80 seems to be the other end, that starts to feel a bit too much. (And the actual number of cards never changed)
If I somehow miss a day, though, that can make things indeed messy.
Anki has good statistics so it shouldn’t be hard to get the number of daily time spent on reviewing cards. The fact that you don’t know is suprising to me as I frequently check the Anki stats. Care to elaborate?
I honestly don’t know. I would say quite much, but it does not feel like that: I do not review all my cards at one time in the day (I have notifications periodically nagging me if there are still due cards, so I don’t forget, and they aren’t too much bother) Another nice trick is to make more, smaller decks. When I see that there are 120 cards in one deck for review, I am not that ecstatic about that. If those same cards are split into 4 decks with 30-30 cars, I don’t even think about it. Generally, 20 cards are play, they don’t even register, and 80 seems to be the other end, that starts to feel a bit too much. (And the actual number of cards never changed)
If I somehow miss a day, though, that can make things indeed messy.
How do you get notifications only if there are still due cards? I would like this
Anki has good statistics so it shouldn’t be hard to get the number of daily time spent on reviewing cards. The fact that you don’t know is suprising to me as I frequently check the Anki stats. Care to elaborate?
I use org-drill, which, AFAIK, does not collect such data.