![]() This is distinct from traditional SRS like Supermemo, Anki and so on, where you keep reviewing those sentences on into the future, at ever increasing intervals. Note that in the original system at least, you do all of your reps up front and after 5 days you're done with a sentence and you keep moving forward. There are also variations on the schedule depending on how fast you want to learn and how much time you have per day. And the sentences from 4 days ago are reviewed 2 times each. The sentences from 3 days ago are reviewed/rep'd 3 times each. Yesterday's and the day before's sentences are reviewed/rep'd 4 times each. For each of the 10 new sentences, you do 5 reps. In one day, you learn 10 new sentences and review 40 old ones. ![]() If you trained for 8 hours every day, that would take 50 years to reach just the first milestone! I don't think it means you need to do one sentence 25,000 times because if each rep takes around 7 seconds and you have 3,000 sentences, that would be a total of 145,833 hours. ![]() The current version is a software-based solution that uses "AI" (the term AI might be a bit overused here) to adapt your learning schedule. ![]() I have only ever used the free sample, but here is the instruction sheet that came with that: The original came out in the form of MP3 files and PDFs, and then I believe printed versions. There are basically two versions of Glossika.
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