At Mon, 21 Sep 2009 14:12:32 +0200, Pere Quintana Seguí wrote: > > [1 <multipart/signed (7bit)>] > [1.1 <text/plain; us-ascii (quoted-printable)>] > > > En/na Russell Adams ha escrit: > > That article looks very interesting. Given the outline format and > > scheduling in Org it would be conceptually simple to accomplish what > > they describe. > > > > That is what I thought. > > > Is there someplace that the algorithm is fully documented? > > There are two free software implementations of supermemo: > > Anki: > http://ichi2.net/anki/index.html > > and > > Mnemosyne: > http://www.mnemosyne-proj.org > > > -- > http://pere.quintanasegui.com > > [1.2 OpenPGP digital signature <application/pgp-signature (7bit)>] > > [2 <text/plain; us-ascii (7bit)>] > _______________________________________________ > Emacs-orgmode mailing list > Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. > Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode
I use Anki myself and it really is an excellent piece of work. It even synchronizes among the different computers that I use. If there was some way to exchange information between Emacs and Anki it would be better than reimplementing supermemo algorithm in org-mode IMHO. Unfortunately, I don't think there is a d-bus interface for Anki. -- Darlan Cavalcante Moreira darc...@gmail.com _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode