Postby johnpa » November 17th, 2008 7:44 pm
I love my iPod Touch for its video capabilities. I like to speak along with my favorite characters in Japanese programs and sing along with karaoke. It helps imprint the words in my brain whether I understand them or not.
I've tried Anki and a couple of other programs, but I'm kind of attached to iFlash (which is still not available on iTouch) so I don't use my iPod for flash. Except for a couple of excellent pre-made flash decks: "Kanji Flash" and "Japanese Flash".
I've tried almost all the dictionary programs. For beginners, I recommend "Japanese", "Jishobot" and "Longman's Japanese".
"Japanese" has a lot of great features: simple verb conjugations, kanji breakdown of words, common words for particular kanji, stroke order animations for major kanji, vocabulary lists, and the ability to save your own vocab lists. (If you can only afford one, this is probably the one to get.)
"Jishobot" has a quick search, grammatical classifications for each word, identification of common words, and no bugs that I know of. (It's perfect for when you want to look up and store some words that you just heard. And a quick way to sort through possible translations for an English word.)
"Longman's Japanese" has great sample sentences. It's big selling point is Natural English to Natural Japanese. It's great for picking up syntax. (The "Oxford Japanese Dictionary" also has sample sentences, but I think "Longman's" are better.) It's probably not for absolute beginners because the sample sentences use kanji. But most of the kanji is not that advanced. I know little more than the kun readings of the 1,000 most frequently used kanji, and I still have little trouble with the readings.
チクショー!まだ日本語が下手です。
#*%^! I still suck at Japanese.