-Added support routines for Tim Bourke's Mnemogogo plugin, which enables you
to review cards on Java-based phones. See
http://www.tbrk.org/software/mnemogogo.html
-fix rare hang in preprocessing paths (reported by LooM).
-Remove hidden limit on grade 1 cards.
-Italian translation by Enrico Leoni.
-Turkish translation by Sercan Oruc.
-Updated German translation by Dimitri Scheftner.
-Updated French translation by Christophe Mealares and Yannick Voglaire.
-Hungarian translation by bkile.
This is a bug fix only release, as all the new features are being
implemented in the 2.x codebase.
(Note that for Windows users we recommend uninstalling the previous
version before doing an upgrade.)
-Fix bug so that vice versa cards now always start with grade 0.
-Fix problems with missing locale under some unix systems.
-Fix hang under Spanish translation.
-Danish translation by Randi H.
-Esperanto translation by jchthys.
-updated Japanese translation by Patrick Kenny.
-Improved support for unicode in filenames and directories.
-Reverted compression of backups from gz to bz2 again, to circumvent a
bug under Windows with unicode directory names.
-Wrote a plugin to always shuffle the revision queue, for users who want
to override the prioritised scheduling introduced in Mnemosyne 1.1.
This plugin can also be downloaded from
http://www.mnemosyne-proj.org/node/142
-Only open the sound system when needed in order to save CPU time
(patch by marmuta).
-More robust upgrading from old Mnemosyne versions.
-Fix bug where default export location was incorrectly specified.
-Reword statistics dialog to make clear that we only show data for
the next week.
-Norwegian translation by Petter Goksoyr Asen.
This project is the successor to memaid.
The Mnemosyne Project has two aspects:
* It's a sophisticated free flash-card tool which optimizes
your learning process.
* It's a research project into the nature of long-term memory.
The Mnemosyne software resembles a traditional flash-card program
to help you memorise question/answer pairs, but with an important
twist: it uses a sophisticated algorithm to schedule the best time
for a card to come up for review. Difficult cards that you tend to
forget quickly will be scheduled more often, while Mnemosyne won't
waste your time on things you remember well.
While you use the software, detailed statistics can be kept on your
learning process. If you want, these logs can be uploaded in a
transparent and anonymous way to a central server for analysis.
This data will be valuable to study the behaviour of our memory
over a very long time period. As an additional benefit, the results
will be used to improve the scheduling algorithms behind the software
even further.