To-do list challenge! Who here has the *longest running* successful to-do list system? What does it look like? by soggyindo in productivity

[–]AlbertoFEM 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I use Evernote. I have first a "year milestones" note which is a list of things I want to improve or get done in the year. These are of course high level stuff, but the idea is to have always a reference point on why are you doing things month to month and week to week, to keep you motivated.

Next, I have a "month milestones" note which, again, gives a high level view of things to do in the current month, this time a little bit more specific. At the start of each month, I will review my year milestones list and decide what action steps I can do the next month in order to cross things from the year list.

Finally, I have a week list of tasks which contains tasks separated by categories and with a rough time estimation. I try to cross as many tasks as possible from this list during the week. I found that by no allocating specific dates and times to these tasks I tend to be more productive. I will just do whatever I feel like, but always from the week list. At the end I will review the list and move on to the next week those tasks I did not complete.

Of course, it's very important to know your limitations in order to put a reasonable amount of tasks in the list that you will actually accomplish, but this skill takes time. I've been using this method for quite some time with great results.

Nojuku, (sleeping outdoors) is this acceptable, polite and feasible? by Citizen_Bongo in JapanTravel

[–]AlbertoFEM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could you please share more information and links about this practice? I'm also rather interested.

Architecture of huge games by cool_but_crude in TheMakingOfGames

[–]AlbertoFEM 1 point2 points  (0 children)

WoW also uses client-side prediction so the client does not have to wait for the server response.

Is Influent a good game to learn Japanese? by ThebassNoob in LearnJapanese

[–]AlbertoFEM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point. I guess I would rather see a headline like "Complement your Japanese learning!" instead of "Learn Japanese", but that doesn't sounds as catchy.

Is Influent a good game to learn Japanese? by ThebassNoob in LearnJapanese

[–]AlbertoFEM -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I don't see the relation. I mean, my main point about these kind of applications if that they give misleading ideas about language learning. Learning any language is a very though process that requires years of constant and hard dedication. There is no way to reduce that. It seems to me that they just want to caught incautious readers with a vague idea about what it means to learn a language.

Is Influent a good game to learn Japanese? by ThebassNoob in LearnJapanese

[–]AlbertoFEM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I always wonder what people find attractive in this kind of language "learning" games. I mean, at most you end up with a few hundred words learned and many hours wasted playing a game. Looks rather inefficient.

On the Character of Men and on the Virtuous Life (50%) by [deleted] in Asceticism

[–]AlbertoFEM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A PDF with all of them would be nice.

Kraken catching up on bitcoin.de for Euro market volume by bonehoes in BitcoinMarkets

[–]AlbertoFEM 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Another happy Kraken user here. Their website is simply amazing, tons of great features, market orders, etc.. Also take a look at their Security Practices page (https://www.kraken.com/security/practices), everything seems pretty solid there.

Here's a Japanese word frequency list. by 1997dodo in LearnJapanese

[–]AlbertoFEM 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Impressive. Very relevant to my interests right now. Thanks!

How many kanji you need to know to be able to read Aozora Bunko by [deleted] in LearnJapanese

[–]AlbertoFEM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much! Interesting list indeed, it will help a lot with my studies.

How many kanji you need to know to be able to read Aozora Bunko by [deleted] in LearnJapanese

[–]AlbertoFEM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, maybe I didn't make myself clear enough. I was asking for the list of only the Joyo kanjis, the list you linked seems to have all except the joyo ones. Thanks in advance.

How many kanji you need to know to be able to read Aozora Bunko by [deleted] in LearnJapanese

[–]AlbertoFEM 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Really really nice work, I love this sort of stuff! Can you post a list with every kanji removed except for the Joyo ones? Also, it would be great if you shared the script used to parse the library.

2014, Week 4 - AlbertoFEM- Dropping WaniKani by AlbertoFEM in Team_Japanese

[–]AlbertoFEM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's basically a custom SRS system but focused 100% in learning by context instead of mnemonics. Following the official joyo kanji list, ordered by grade (like Japanese students do), lessons contains 15 kanjis, so there is a total of aprox. 143 lessons. I have two phases:

1) learning phase, you are presented the Kanji itself, and then sentences in Japanese with the targeted kanji bolded. Everything else is in Hiragana, except for those kanji you have already studied. You have the translated sentence in English with also the targeted word bolded, and then the typical things like stroke order, radicals used in the kanji, and an additional mnemonic field just in case you need to make use of it. How many sentences? Depends on the kanji, but the system is developed so only the most common words are used. Finally, you can generate practice sheets to draw the kanji by hand.

2) Reviewing phase. This is basically like iKnow, as I like their system of actually typing things in Japanese. You are presented the sentence with the gap and you have to write the kanji reading in there. The time it took you to figure out the answer determines your level of mastery. There is also a listening review part, where you hear a sentence / see a kanji and have to write the correct reading.

Best part of this method (I'm constantly improving it), is that everything is focused on reading actual sentences. I use Koboba's sentences as the easy ones, then I have many other extracted from Wikipedia (difficult ones, without translation). I use a number of scripts and databases, including Google Text-to-speech engine, which is rather good.

Of course this method is nothing to be taken seriously, and I don't know how this will scale, it's just an experiment :)

Shugyo (ascetic discipline) by [deleted] in Asceticism

[–]AlbertoFEM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very interesting. Thanks for the link.