There's a lot I like about Wagotabi. Not perfect by any means, but I think if offers a fair bit for reinforcement fairly naturally without just always beating you over the head with flash cards. And does offer a little listening practice too at times.
HotChickenFeet
I've almost made it to a one month long streak. It feels good my retention rate has leveled out after having restarted. Still a long way to go but currently I've learned ~35% of n5 kanji, and ~20% of n5 vocab. Yay progress!
I've not adopted it consistently, but Wagotabi looks to be a fun tool to learn/study, too.
Do you know if there's a way to improve the routing part? I find it often takes really obtuse paths that go out of the way and add time. It shows the more optimal roads as existing, so I'm not sure why. Maybe missing speed limits or something that make it think worse roads are more optimal?
Me neither. Is it supposed to be a call of violence like "shorten the lives of the rich to today"? Or "shorten the lives of the rich by the end of today"?
Any particular recommendations?
Amazon is helping TimmiXyZ29 sell me a new washer. TimmiXyZ29 is not a certified salesman for Whirlpool Washers. Timmi is actually refurbishing old washers and selling them as new. My washer burns the house down. I think we all agree Timi is responsible, but where do I start?
- The manufacture says they can't be responsible because Timi/Amazon aren't selling certified Whirlpool goods.
- Timmi says he is just selling a product, it's not his fault
- Amazon says they're just selling a product, it's not their fault
Now add an additional level; the order is fulfilled by Amazon. Timmi, Whirlpool and other sellers now give Amazon these washers, and Amazon keeps them in a communal pool and sends it on Timmis behalf. Now we don't even know where the original washer came from.
What if amazon deletes, hides, or deprioritized disparaging reviews that showed the product was dangerous, and you now buy it?
There's so many levels of possible problems that it can be hard to consistently ascribe blame to any one party when sold through amazon.
I do expect that if a party is selling goods that end up being dangerous, and users have consistently reported the failures/problems in amazon, amazon should perhaps be responsible if they did not block the seller/product or adequately raise awareness about the concern.
Hopefully you can find something that fills that need - but if it's not possible you can always significantly reduce your usage of the visa in favor of better alternatives. Then just use the visa where you feel you must for insurance protection.
Youre right that this is financially related, but it was more to say - I'm not advising that switching to foreign investments is financially beneficial, just morally recommended. Folks doing this may end up with lower retirement funds in the end.
Not related other than learning resource - but I'll also mention on the off chance it's useful to anyone, I like these resources for practicing kana:
Each are useful in their own right, but I was kind of contemplating making an opensource repo that has similar (but hopefully refined) capabilities, maybe detecting when you commonly confuse two characters and then offer to give you a short drill of just those characters to reinforce.
Obviously less and less useful as time goes on and the hiragana are cemented in your memory, but it makes me sad to think someone might take them down one day and they'd just be lost.