@@actionnotreaction1094 Thanks! How long did you Anki in engineering school? I’m interested in Ankifying my hopeful engineering career (already graduated) for continuous professional development)
Hey @Luis H Steuer Thanks for your comment! I created an Anki deck for each course unit, a deck for each year, and finally, a main deck for the whole electrical engineering course. I like this division because since I'm in the last year of the course, it wouldn't be practical to study an area of electrical engineering (like Circuit Theory, for example) without a more practical application like an exam or evaluation. When I want to study a particular course unit, I study the deck, and to increase the difficulty, I review a year deck or the whole electrical engineering deck. But, if I were starting Anki when I finished university, I would make a deck for each area and find a way to find the material easily! And then create a deck for aggregating that deck in a broader context (for example: Robotics -> Control Theory -> Signal Theory, etc.) To complement this answer, I think creating the habit of making your Anki decks, reviewing them often, and getting a sense of what is essential are the most important parts of not forgetting concepts and insights in engineering I hope you find this answer helpful! - Eduardo
Much helpful thank you, love your content
Thank you! Much appreciated
Good video, ace
Very good
Thank you!
Buddy Are you Electrical engineer?
Hello! Thanks for the comment
I'm in the final year of Electrical and Computer Engineering (Robotics)
- Eduardo
@@actionnotreaction1094 Thanks! How long did you Anki in engineering school? I’m interested in Ankifying my hopeful engineering career (already graduated) for continuous professional development)
Hey @Luis H Steuer
Thanks for your comment!
I created an Anki deck for each course unit, a deck for each year, and finally, a main deck for the whole electrical engineering course.
I like this division because since I'm in the last year of the course, it wouldn't be practical to study an area of electrical engineering (like Circuit Theory, for example) without a more practical application like an exam or evaluation.
When I want to study a particular course unit, I study the deck, and to increase the difficulty, I review a year deck or the whole electrical engineering deck.
But, if I were starting Anki when I finished university, I would make a deck for each area and find a way to find the material easily! And then create a deck for aggregating that deck in a broader context (for example: Robotics -> Control Theory -> Signal Theory, etc.)
To complement this answer, I think creating the habit of making your Anki decks, reviewing them often, and getting a sense of what is essential are the most important parts of not forgetting concepts and insights in engineering
I hope you find this answer helpful!
- Eduardo