Inkren’s Skritter.com launches Japanese version of its character learning system.

Obleron, Ohio – January 30, 2010 – Inkren is proud to announce the launch of Skritter.com’s Japanese version. The Skritter.com service, already used thousands of hours per month by students learning Chinese characters can now help those learning the intricate characters of Asia’s two largest economies, Chinese and Japanese.

Inkren’s Skritter.com launches Japanese version of its character learning system.

Inkren, makers of Skritter.com’s Chinese character learning system announce the launch of their automated Japanese character learning service.

Obleron, Ohio – January 30, 2010 – Inkren is proud to announce the launch of Skritter.com’s Japanese version.  The Skritter.com service, already used thousands of hours per month by students learning Chinese characters can now help those learning the intricate characters of Asia’s two largest economies, Chinese and Japanese.

Skritter.com started after Nick Winter got the idea that learning Chinese characters should be more like a video game.  After some research confirmed that students of Chinese typically retain only 39% of the characters they learn after three semesters of study he persuaded two friends to start Inkren and bring the venture to life.

Japanese characters (Kanji) are a logical extension for Skritter.com as the character sets for both languages came from the same original set of ancient Chinese characters.  Says Winter “Japanese learning technology is way ahead of Chinese, but those 2000 daily-use Kanji are still titans looming on the path to fluency. We want to topple them.” 

Japanese and Chinese have long been among the most difficult languages to learn due to the complex characters these languages employ.  Skritter.com uses computer algorithms to decide when a learner has drawn a character properly (using a mouse, touchpad, or computer tablet) giving instant feedback.  The site also tracks which characters a user has gotten correct giving progress reports and feeding the user reviews spaced for proper learning.

The purpose of Skritter.com says co-founder Scott Erickson is “to take the hardest part of learning Chinese and Japanese, the reading and writing of characters, and make it as efficient, effective and engaging as possible.”  Inkren has signed deals with several universities allowing their students unlimited use of the technology.  Learners spent 20,764 hours learning 484,260 Chinese characters in 2009 using Skritter and are on course to greatly exceed these numbers in 2010.  Building support for Japanese characters has been a major development project and the development team is excited to give students the world over a tool that can help them make it easier to learn Japanese characters and discover the richness of the Japanese language.

The Japanese learning service has been in testing for several months working out all of the bugs and making sure that lists of characters from the most popular Japanese textbooks are included at launch.  Beta users have provided significant feedback helping to squish bugs and improve features to make the service ready for launch today.

Inkren’s is an Ohio based software start-up company providing an integrated teaching tool, focusing on written Chinese and Japanese (Hanzi and Kanji), that helps language learners learn more quickly.  For more information on this press release please contact George Saines at (440) 935-5105.

Skritter.com, the Write way to learn Chinese and Japanese.

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Tools and Resources:

Images of Skritter (you have our permission to republish these free of charge):
http://www.dropbox.com/gallery/463339/1/Skritter%20Images?h=8551d3

Demo (takes 3~5 minutes):
http://www.skritter.com/demo

Quotes & Schools Using Skritter:
http://www.skritter.com/signup

Sample Stories:
(Product Review) CNet – The Tech Dynasty
(Internet Start-Ups) KillerStartups, Skritter.com – Learning Chinese the Easy Way

User Forum (Get a response from a user in your town or some quotes in no time from friendly Skritter users): 
http://www.skritter.com/forum

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Saturday

January 30th, 2010

Jimmy Kilpatrick

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