Follow Along

faberfedorfaberfedor: @johncappiello Can you say "Yes" or do you have to hit a button? The former would be really cool!
10 hours ago
writerkywriterky: @johncappiello Ewwwww. I think that's creepy!!!!!!!!!!!
11 hours ago
johncappiellojohncappiello: I get in my car at the end of the day & start my gps app (Waze). "Good evening John, are you heading home?" The future is now. Awesome.
11 hours ago
johnbeecherjohnbeecher: @MeldonJ every time I move house I am amazed by the number of books I have acquired.
15 hours ago
MeldonJMeldonJ: The move is coming along! During the process I've realized that 80% of my possessions are books: good for the soul, bad for the back...
24 hours ago
mediaaprilmediaapril: @gvasselli Don't lose your planning abilities, though! They'll come in handy holidaytime and when you want to go on vacation.
1 day ago
MeldonJMeldonJ: RT @85Broads: "You have to learn the rules of the game. And then you have to play better than anyone else." ~ Albert Einstein
1 day ago
MeldonJMeldonJ: 24 hr allergy meds are lies; 6 hrs later I feel like death is upon me. Unfortunately I'm too scared 2 take another 1. Good job warning label
1 day ago
mediaaprilmediaapril: This story is so much more than royal voicemail (via @romenesko) How Murdoch's News hacked in2 Royal Family's v mail. http://journ.us/a2dQjv
1 day ago
  • The Betta Rosetta

    by Max Sobol on January 12, 2010

    Ryan Meinzer needed to learn Japanese fast. He loved Rosetta Stone’s approach, but like many students he had no money…nor discipline to stay seated more than 5 minutes at a time.

    “I wanted to learn Japanese in the many sporadic idle minutes of my day, one word at a time, one minute at a time,” says Meinzer, “…and I didn’t have the $300 for those attractive yellow Rosetta Stone boxes.”

    Two years later, and two years more proficient in Japanese, Meinzer now runs his own language learning software company, PlaySay.com, which has served over 10 million digital vocabulary flashcard files to over 4,000 users worldwide. The online business currently offers products to learn Japanese, learn Chinese, and to learn Spanish, with many more languages to come. Many language departments of major universities across the United States are rapidly integrating the products into their curriculums for students. With the ability to trash their paper flashcards, students are raving about PlaySay.com. The Tokyo Metropolis and The Philadelphia Inquirer also seem to enjoy spreading the news of this cool new competitor of Rosetta Stone.

    “Rosetta Stone is great for language learners who have discipline, time, and money,” says Meinzer, “PlaySay.com, however, is for the other 99% of us.”

    PlaySay.com’s products can be used anytime and anywhere, on any mobile device (iPod, cell phone, PDA, etc.). The company’s mission is to empower busy people to extract value from any idle minute with the most practical language learning on the go.

    What is unique about Meinzer’s model is that he in no way denies that Rosetta Stone’s language learning method is superior to PlaySay.com’s. He simply argues that practicality is lost due to the intimidating amount of discipline and time needed for Rosetta Stone. He attests that the majority of people buying the pricey yellow Rosetta Stone boxes end up allowing them to collect dust after a few weeks, just as those pricey exercise machines they purchased for a New Year’s Resolution.

    This New Year, let’s make a resolution we can all keep – to learn how to say “Thank You” to the Japanese, Chinese, or Spanish friend of ours in their native language by learning it on our cell phone with a PlaySay.com product. That has to be easier than losing 20 pounds or quitting smoking.

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