Conversation

I think there is so much more room upmarket for anything that remotely touches productivity than people realize. There's a market for $360 / yr email clients, and I'd bet there's one for $500 mice, keyboards, webcams and calendar clients too.
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I think it's mostly about flexibility: purpose-built products like Memrise are great for e.g. language learning, but it's not going to help you write your own prompts about insights from papers you're reading, etc.
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I did get into memrise due to a language learning hobby but have since made my own Memrise courses for other stuff and find this to not be true? Or: how is Anki different/better at this? (My guess: no requirement for a fixed/default reply?)
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Mostly details about Memrise's implementation: - courses must be public - editor clumsy for large collections - lacks a quick-add interface - editor's tiny boxes are clearly designed for vocab ("add words"), hide content beyond first few words - cumbersome image support etc
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