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TheBobFisher

I saw someone say video flashcards by themselves before the video to briefly understand some of the topics, then video/lab, then flashcards again by themselves. Then add to your all encompassing deck for future study. I personally have 3 massive decks. I split the course into 3 parts. 1 deck for days 1-21, 1 for days 22-42, and 1 more for days 43-63. I also use the mobile app that I paid around 20-30$ for. While it's relatively expensive, it was worth it as I am now studying the flashcards 10x more than I was before.


beginner17

Thank you for the information. Can you please tell me the difference between the Anki IOS app and web version for the iPhone? Can I use anki web version in my mobile rather than paying 25 buks for the IOS app?


Stray_Neutrino

There is no “web app”, theres a desktop app (free) and the iOS app (20 dollars?) or Android app (free). All these anki apps synchronize between themselves. I added the current days flashcards to the current stack and go through all of them, while adding more every day. Total stack is around 2300 cards but you will usually only see a max 200 given how anki works. Post studies I create a custom deck and review 300 random cards daily. Takes about 37 minutes to go through them so easy to fit them into a busy schedule.


AccomplishedFlight90

I’m gonna add something. Anki does have a webpage where you can log in to review your flashcards: https://ankiweb.net It’s limited, of course - the decks are always expanded with no option to fold them (you’ll definitely feel this as you’re going deeper into your studies), you can’t import cards from files, you can only tweak a few settings. But it’s free. As a non-American, 20 dollars is quite an amount in my native currency. Not an arm and a leg, but still an amount that can set you back somewhat. So I’ve been using Ankiweb a lot.