Your iPhone Just Got Bilingual

Byki Spanish for iPhone

Byki Spanish for iPhone

I’ve heard through the grapevine that our CEO, Mike Quinlan, has been neglecting his usual favorite iPhone apps and firing up the new Byki Spanish iPhone app instead. What this means to us in the User Experience department is: mission success! Byki is just as addictive on the iPhone as it is on the desktop and the Web. And the biggest critic of our company’s products is hooked.

There are a lot of great iPhone apps out there, but just think… instead of the usual turn-off-the-brain gaming session, you could spend 10 minutes increasing your Spanish or French vocabulary. Just like its computer-based counterparts, Byki for iPhone uses research-backed memory-locking techniques designed for adults learning second languages. All 3 modes, Preview It, Recognize It, and Produce It, are active, plus there’s an excellent new Quiz mode for those of us who have a penchant for testing ourselves.

Some of the things that make Byki a killer iPhone application:

  • It’s just $9.99, and you get access to over 75 premium Byki lists in your language

  • 3 learning modes plus the new quiz mode
  • SlowSound technology to slow down audio playback of words and phrases
  • Search your wordbank using the iPhone keyboard, turning iByki into a portable phrasebook
  • Fast to use—jump into learning within seconds
  • It’s very pretty, and we’ve added all the trademark iPhone finger-slidin’ functionality you’d expect from a slick new app!

Try it out, and if you like it, leave a comment on the iTunes store and let the rest of the world know there’s a premium language-learning application out there. Plus, keep your eye out for more languages!

Visit Transparent Language (that’s the name of our parent company) on the Apple App Store

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Language Focused Holiday eCards

We at Byki would like to wish our language learning community happy holidays and prosperity in the New Year. In celebration of the season, we’ve just launched free foreign language eCards

These eCards offer warm holiday wishes in multiple languages accompanied by beautiful imagery and music. Share your love for language learning with all your friends by wishing them happy holidays in your favorite foreign language!

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How to Achieve “The Click” Moment

Giving up on a new language is too easy. It’s because starting out is so difficult to do. Now matter how you approach the task, your mind and memory are often ill-prepared for the, well, foreign nature of the language you’re trying to understand. With so many scholars, Web sites, and books telling you how to begin, you may try three or four different approaches (hoping something will click) and then give up after a dozen hours when the language still reads like gibberish.

Recently I taught myself 200 words and phrases in Czech. It took me only a few weeks, even with a busy schedule, of using Byki Deluxe for a short 30 minutes a day. I remember the first few hours of work: they were very discouraging. Nothing seemed learnable; every word had letters that looked like they didn’t belong and there seemed to be no rhyme or reason to the structure of sentences.

English: How do I get to…?
Czech: Jak se dostanu do…?

Memorizing that phrase in Czech was difficult because nothing matched anything my brain had ever encountered before. I could see that they were both questions, and I could guess that “do” meant “to”, but it could just have easily meant “I” or “how.” Knowing not every language has the same sentence structure as English, I tried not to make any assumptions about Czech. So in the end I just had to memorize the entire phrase, letter for letter, and trust that, later on, I would understand what the words meant.

This is where most people get frustrated. It feels like that moment—the moment when everything clicks and the language makes sense—will never come. Well, take it from someone who’s breached the barrier several times: The Click isn’t far away. There are a few simple rules that I think will help you immensely:

  1. Stick with a single plan of attack. Don’t try a different approach every time you hit a wall. Instead, walk away for a few hours and come back to the table doing the same thing you were doing before. You may be surprised at how fresh and accomodating the material seems.
  2. Keep it simple. Don’t try to become an expert overnight; start with something simple like memorizing common vocabulary and phrases, watching conversational videos, or trying to make sense of some newspaper headlines.
  3. Stick with it for a couple of weeks, even if you feel frustrated. With a busy schedule, two weeks’ work might add up to four or five hours of solid studying. That’s what it’ll take for your brain to finally start noticing patterns. When those patterns start to emerge, that’s when you’ll notice how much easier it is to learn new material.
  4. Refresh what you’ve learned. Every once in a while, go back and make sure you still remember what you learned the previous session. Your brain really needs to know this stuff in order to start recognizing patterns.

After learning just the first few Quick Start! lists, which you get free in Byki Express, and always refreshing material from my previous study session, I began to piece together a puzzle larger than just the words and phrases I was learning. The puzzle told a story about how the Czech language is structured and what each word means. For example, these are some phrases I had committed to memory, including the one I mentioned earlier:

English Czech
How are you? Jak se máte?
How do you get to…? Jak se dostanu do…?
I would like to go to… Chtêl bych se dostat do…

Each of these comes from a different wordlist, each learned during a separate study session. Can you see the relationship between them? As I approached my fourth or fifth hour of studying, my brain had, on its own, recognized some patterns:

  • “Jak se” seemed to mean “how”
  • “Dosta__ do” seemed to be about going somewhere

And knowing those, it was easy to tell what the rest of the words in each sentence must have meant (”máte” meant “you” and “chtêl bych” meant “I would like”). Sure enough, Byki confirmed my guesses later on. At this point, Czech was no longer a confusing and hostile city for my tourist brain to get hopelessly lost in. Rather, I had found some familiar ground to stand on; a place from which I could orient myself. In other words, by keeping on with my study of vocabulary, I had achieved The Click moment. And it felt great. I began to recognize adjectives and verbs, and soon I was guessing the correct answers to items I’d never encountered before. The rest of my journey to 200 Czech phrases was a delight.

The moral of the story is: don’t give up. Keep driving. Keep trying. Don’t change your tactics too often. And make sure, even if it doesn’t seem to make sense at the time, to commit everything you learn to your long-term memory. Only by recalling your prior knowledge can you recognize patterns, have your moment of connection with the language, and proceed to roll your little snowball of knowledge into a giant snow-boulder of language proficiency.

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Featured Byki User: JStone

JStone takes excellent advantage of Byki’s flexibility as a language-learning tool, having created Byki lists in two languages (Cherokee and Spanish)! JStone includes both images and sound in many lists, focusing on a wide variety of subjects at varying levels of scope. After learning JStone’s Byki lists, you might be able to

Here’s what JStone has to say about learning foreign languages and using Byki to build vocabulary:

Learning a foreign language can open your eyes to the world. It gives you insight that just studying facts and figures about places can’t do. When learning a language, you learn so much; culture, history, politics, ways of thought, etc. And when you finally get to visit the countries and put into use the languages that you’ve studied you feel such a great sense of accomplishment. But the best thing is getting to meet the people and getting to develop relationships with them one-on-one. You took the time to study and learn their language and customs and now all that hard work is paying off in ways you could never have imagined.

Learning a foreign language requires a lot of memorization and practice of words and phrases. This is not the easiest or most entertaining thing to do. It’s usually quite boring. I have used Byki with my students for the last several years to help them memorize vocabulary words and phrases and have seen their overall ability to recall, spell, and say words improve greatly. Byki is a great tool for foreign language teachers or anyone wanting to learn basic phrases and pronunciation in a foreign language.

Keep an eye on this Byki user; it’s rare to find people willing to offer so much quality language content that covers both specific and general knowledge.

Visit JStone’s Byki profile

Subscribe to JStone’s Byki List feed

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How do I start using Byki Express?

Here’s how to start using Byki Express to learn a foreign language. You’ll notice that after you sign in you’re presented with a dozen topics, called “Byki lists,” that you can open. Available Byki lists usually include:

  • 01 - Quick Start!
  • 02 - Quick Start!
  • 03 - Quick Start!
  • Animals 1
  • Colors (Words)
  • Days of the Week 1 (Words)
  • Meeting and Greeting 1 (Phrases)
  • Meeting and Greeting 2 (Phrases)
  • Numbers: Cardinal 1 (Words)
  • Taking a Taxi 1 (Words)
  • Taking a Taxi 2 (Phrases)
  • Taking a Taxi 3 (Phrases)

The Quick Start! Byki lists will give you a quick introduction to the language, teaching you some of the most basic words and survival phrases. If you don’t know where to start, try them first.

If you would like to see how many vocabulary words you can learn in a very short amount of time, try using any of the Byki lists marked as “(Words)”.

If you would prefer to learn how to say basic phrases like “Good afternoon,” and “How are you?” Then start with Meeting and Greeting 1 and work your way through Meeting and Greeting 2.

The Taking a Taxi series of Byki lists illustrates the power of the Byki system to teach you language for surviving very specific scenarios. By starting with basic taxi- and travel-related vocabulary in Taking a Taxi 1 and then moving on to learning basic phrases, directions, and questions in Taking a Taxi 2 and 3, you’ll end up with a working knowledge of hiring transportation in another language, after only an hour or so of use. Byki Deluxe has even more scenarios just like this one, covering a wide range of topics.

Tip: For more free lists to use with Byki Express, visit Byki ListCentral.

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Learn languages for free on Byki ListCentral

People who own Byki Deluxe can author their own Byki lists. Sometimes they choose to share those lists by uploading them to ListCentral, Byki.com’s language-learning community. When you share a Byki list on ListCentral, anybody in the world can use it in multiple ways, including:

  • Learning it on ListCentral using Byki Web
  • Downloading it to Byki Express or Byki Deluxe to learn on a computer
  • Rating it, tagging it, and commenting on it for other Byki users to see
  • Marking it as a favorite Byki list

Over 1,000 free Byki lists

You never have to stop learning a language for free. With over 1,000 free Byki lists full of user-generated words and phrases at your disposal, you can keep adding items to your My Learned Items reservoir. Experiment with multiple languages. Find vocabulary for specific topics. The possibilities are endless: imagine what you can accomplish for free on Byki.com in almost no time at all!

Visit Byki.com ListCentral and download as many Byki lists as you want to Byki Express.

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How Byki treats incorrect answers

Nobody likes getting a wrong answer. When you’re using Byki Express or Byki Deluxe to learn a language, you’re bound to get lots of wrong answers, and that’s okay. Byki will take care of you and make sure you know every word and phrase with 100% Perfect Recall by the time you’re finished.

Still. That “wrong-answer” frowny face can ruin your day sometimes. What if you typed an answer that you think is good enough? What if you accidentally typed a stray letter? What if you simply didn’t capitalize your answer, and you don’t care if Byki thinks it’s wrong? Just click the little link below the frowny face:

Accept as Correct

When you do, you’ll get three options:

  • Typo. Accept this answer one time only.
  • Alternative Answer. Always accept this answer as correct.
  • Incorrect Answer. Do not accept this answer.

Use the Typo option when you made an honest-to-goodness mistake. Perhaps you accidentally hit the Z key with your pinky and typed “holza” instead of “hola”. Fine. Mark it as a typo.

Alternative Answer is a little trickier. When you mark what you typed as an alternative answer, Byki will accept it as correct forever after. Therefore, do not mark typos—especially typos you’re likely to repeat—as alternative answers. You don’t want to tell Byki to accept your most common mistakes as correct—if they are truly mistakes. Let’s say, though, you want to type “hi” instead of “hello” as the translation for Spanish “hola,” even though Byki says “hello” is the right answer. Fine. Mark “hi” as an alternative answer. Be careful, though: if you don’t know that your alternative answer is acceptible, you may be learning a bad translation. When in doubt, trust Byki’s exact translations.

Incorrect Answer. It’s obvious enough: you know that the answer you typed was wrong, and you have to admit you goofed. Choose this option. It’ll be fine: Byki will make sure you don’t see that wretched frowny face very often again.

Tip: You can tell Byki to ignore capital letters and punctuation in typed answers (thus “good evening” will be accepted for “Good evening.”), but only for English. You’ll have to type exactly what’s on the card when you’re producing a foreign language.

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Keeping words in your memory forever with Byki

Both Byki Express and Byki Deluxe guarantee that you will learn foreign words and phrases with Perfect Recall. That means after you learn a list you’ll be able to remember 100% of the words and phrases you learned, in both English and another language. As you finish Byki lists, you’ll feel your knowledge of foreign words and phrases growing, pooling into what feels almost like a language reservoir.

Tap into that reservoir.

You can visit the My Learned Items tab in Byki to see

  • How many words and phrases you’ve learned (consisting of fresh and stale items)
  • How many words and phrases may have grown stale in your memory since last time you used the program
  • Your progress since you started using Byki Express

We call words and phrases “items” because each bit of language you learn sits on a shelf in your memory, like an item in a store. You can imagine that, after a while, some neglected items (in the back of the store on the left) can grow dusty and stale, needing to be polished or refurbished. In other words, your memory has to be refreshed.

See what happens when you click the highlighted “Refresh 10 Most Stale Items” button in the lower-right of the My Learned Items screen: you’ll review ten words that you haven’t seen in a while. After you’re done, those words will become fresh again in your memory. The pie chart will reflect that fewer items are stale, which means you still know them very well.

My Learned Items, while it may seem academic or unnecessary, is one of the most powerful features in Byki Express. It will guarantee that whatever you learn will stay fresh in your memory, forever, even if you learned it a year ago. Imagine going to France and realizing that you’ve forgotten all the French you ever knew. Byki stops that from happening.

Byki Deluxe has not only My Learned Items, but also a slew of self-testing options that let you fairly evaluate and track your knowledge as you improve over time. Testing and My Learned Items together make an incredibly powerful language-learning tool for anybody.

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4 ways to understand how Byki teaches foreign languages

Both Byki Express and Byki Deluxe subscribe to the idea that to master a language you must collect as many words in your memory as possible. Many langauge teaching tools try to have users memorize packaged, finished phrases, like, “Excuse me, could you please point me to the nearest post office?” While that may seem attractive, you’re much better off spending the 5 minutes it would’ve taken you to learn that phrase learning how to say “post office,” “bank,” “train station,” “airport,” and “hotel,” because now you can effectively ask native speakers where five different places are, rather than just one. “Train station?” you might ask. And you’d get pointed in the right direction.

As you learn, you’ll find that Byki teaches you more than just words. But we stand behind our core value: collecting words comes first. Adults learn better that way. It’s kids that benefit from immersion and listening to complete sentences. But I digress. Here’s the meat of the article:

How Byki rapidly improves your language skills is like…

1. Candy

Half the addiction of individually wrapped candies is taking them out of their wrappers and popping them into your mouth one by one.

Byki is like language candy. Each time you learn a word or phrase, it’s like eating a piece of candy. Only, it’s good for you. Eat 12-15 words at a time and you can’t stop reaching for more. After you’ve learned 50 words in less than an hour, you’ll feel great.

2. Push-ups

Push-ups have a high long-term payoff. By simply repeating the motion of up-down, you incrementally add strength to your body. After a while you become addicted to the feeling, even though it’s hard work.

Using Byki is like doing push-ups for your memory, filling it with foreign words and phrases to increase its strength in another language. Best of all, it’s a lot of fun, so what would normally seem repetitive (say, if you were using paper flash cards) is suddenly addictive when you’re using Byki. Try it out, and you may be doing more mental push-ups than you ever thought you were capable of.

3. The driving range

Before you go play golf for the first time, it’s much better to practice at the driving range than it is to jump right into an 18-hole course. In order to improve your golf swing, you have to do it many times. But, unlike push-ups, golf is more about building a technique more than it is about building strength. You’re aiming somewhere, or you’re at least gauging your distance with each swing. Comparing. Adjusting.

If you use Byki correctly, you’ll steadily perfect your language technique. You’ll constantly be comparing your accent and pronunciation to that of a real native speaker. You’ll pick up on irregularities and verbal nuances. Byki gives you confidence in your technique, which will give you the confidence you need to use your foreign language in the real world.

4. Trading cards

You’ve probably seen kids in high school spending hundreds of dollars on trading cards. Why are they so addictive? Because it’s fun to collect things. And the more you collect, the more formidable your deck of trading cards becomes.

Every time you fire up Byki Express or Byki Deluxe, you’re about to collect anywhere from 10-100 more foreign words and phrases in your memory. Just by sitting at your computer, you make your “deck” of foreign language knowledge more powerful, giving it more possible combinations and power plays to make. Byki lets you pick and choose what you collect, just like a trading card game. And just like a trading card game, Byki makes it fun to collect more and more (until you can defeat all your friends every time).

Art contribution by Porcelaingirl°

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Typing foreign characters in Byki

Step 3 of Byki’s learning mode, Produce It, requires you to type foreign words and phrases into a text box. Sometimes those words contain special characters not found on a Standard English keyboard. Normally, typing foreign characters is a pain, but Byki gives you a much better way to do this than copying them from your Character Map or using cryptic Option commands. In fact, depending on the language, you have two methods at your disposal:

  • Using the Shift + arrow keys (for languages that use the Latin alphabet, like Spanish and French)
  • Using Byki’s Keyboard Map (for languages with non-Latin alphabets, like Arabic and Russian)

The Latin alphabet is the same alphabet used in English. But sometimes a language like Spanish will require an accent or other variation on a given letter. Let’s say you want to type sábado, the Spanish word for Saturday:

  • Pause after you’ve typed the letter that needs a special accent—in this case, the first “a”.sa(Don’t move the blinking cursor, and don’t highlight the “a”. Just keep the cursor where it is, at the end of what you typed.)
  • Hit Shift + Up Arrow. Your answer should change to
  • Now, continue typing:sábado
  • And check your answer. Voilà! You’ve done it. Some letters will give you multiple options; keep hitting Shift + Up Arrow to see them one by one.If you are learning a language with a non-Latin alphabet, like Arabic, Byki’s virtual Keyboard Map will appear on your screen when you reach the written portion of Produce It. You can click on any of the keys to make the corresponding character appear in your answer field, or you can use your computer’s physical keyboard to type. Either way, Byki’s Keyboard Map will respond to anything you type, including Shift, Ctrl, and Alt, which sometimes reveal more options for you. Click the keyboard button next to the Skip Card button at any time to turn the Keyboard Map off or on again.You’re all set to type foreign characters! Now all you have to do is type the right answers. (If only that were as simple as using the keyboard… sigh.)
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