Hi all - Just wanted to share something that has helped me a lot. I have listened to the podcasts for several months now, and had a kana symbol chart at my work desk for about 5 months now - couldn't remember squat off of it. Looked at some DIY flash cards - don't even bother.
So I finally broke down and bought the Kana flashcards from the Jpod101 store. These use a special technique of picture mnemonics to teach you sound-to-symbol (e.g. - Reindeer antlers for the character "RE"). I can't stress to you how powerful a teaching tool this is and I would strongly recommend to anyone just starting here - Don't put it off, get their cards today! These cards combine several tools including font variations and stroke order - Did I mention it teaches you many Japanese words? - and I can honestly tell you it will put you light-years ahead if you are new to this, as I am. You'll be surprised how much more you can learn from the podcasts by understanding exactly what syllables are being used. I wish I had bought these right when I started, I'm sure I'd be a lot farther along than I am.
The method I found most powerful is to look at the 'cheat-side' back of the card and learn the main character of that card using the 'pict-o-gram', repeat it out loud a few times. At the bottom of the 'test-side' front are 5 words in Kana using that character. Try to pick apart each word, flipping the card front-to-back to 'cheat' the answer if you don't recognize a given character. Look at each word until you can read it out loud fluidly from the test-side, repeating several times. This way you will pick up several characters each card; by the time you get halfway thru the deck, you'll be sight-reading many of the words! They've done a lot of work on these cards to make them most effective - You can see samples in the jpod101 store of what a couple of cards look like. There is a Kata deck and a separate Hira deck, plus a couple of full chart cards.
Another idea - Get a friend to drill you on the cards! This is a great method (and your friend will definitely laugh when you hit the "ma" card)
In right around 1 week - studying about 30-minutes to an hour per night I had the kata kana down pretty solid and found that I could actually navigate around Japanese web pages; Friends, this was a big WOW for me, even though I'm reading slowly, it's really great! I'm halfway through my 3rd week owning these and I have about half of the Hiragana set down, and I keep hitting the Kana deck just to make sure I am good on it as well.
Just goes to show this old dog can learn new tricks!
Joel