Comment by david_allison
1 day ago
Given what you've said:
* Make your own cards (unless there's an automated workflow [Japanese, sentence mining], really good shared decks, or you're studying for a standardized exam [USMLE])
* Deck Settings (scheduling): Enable FSRS. Press 'Optimize', then press optimize once per month.
* Deck Settings (workload): Wait 2 weeks before gradually increasing new cards per day (if you want to study for longer). Decrease it immediately if you feel you're getting overwhelmed.
* Deck Settings (backlog): Set max reviews/day to 9999
* App Settings: Disable 'Show next review time above answer buttons'
* Addons: https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/876946123 (you seem to have a problem with answer button selection)
* Recommended: Press 'sync', and create an AnkiWeb account. In app settings, set Anki to auto-sync on open/close. This is a free backup.
* Optional: Use a mobile client (AnkiDroid is free on Android, AnkiWeb is free on iOS)
You'll feel like you completed the first day far too quickly, and will want to do more. Avoid overstudying until you build intuition for how it impacts your daily workload.
Use Anki every day
Thank you, the pass / fail addon will help a lot I think, in addition to the FSRS features included in the article. I'll come back to this comment for setting up my settings before starting up again with Anki.
If I'm planning to learn several topics at once (I'm never preparing for anything I will be tested on or hit a deadline for, this is not for a school, work, or travel program), is it better to treat the decks as one big combined review do you think?
Your call.
Ideally one deck, but add a tag when creating the note, so you can separate things out later if you want to pause learning something/split them out.
> Use Anki every day
I think this is great advice. I have some friends that used Anki that told me "oh yeah I just study once per week" and I just had PTSD of when I forgot to do one day. Sometimes I would miss a day due to traveling and timezone difference and I would instantly panic when I would see 400+ cards to review.
If you don't do it daily, Anki doesn't make any sense to me. My recommendation—to that friend and everyone else—is to study a little bit every day. It's much better for building a strong foundation, especially for languages.