![NebuPookins.net [NebuPookins.net]](/images/iconNP.png)
Remember how I mentioned I was "competing" with a friend to learn Kanjis? Well, Felix and I thought it'd be cool to get a graph of our progress to see how fast each of us is progressing, but we could find a website that lets you host graphs for free (a potential niche for someone to fill?)
Anyway, so I decided to write some small PHP app on NebuPookins.net to chart our progress, but I decided to drop the graph idea. That's how the "KanjiList" was born. If you check the modules on the right, there's a new module called "Kanji Lists". Every user can have a kanji list; all you gotta do is log in, click on someone's existing kanji list, and then you'll see a form to start adding kanjis to your own list. If you have 1 or more kanjis in your list, your name will show up in the "Kanji List" module.
So what is a "Kanji List"? It's just a list of characters, not necessarily Kanji characters, which NP.net will keep track of for you. I'm using it as a list of all the kanjis I know, but you could use it as a list of kanjis you want to learn, or kanjis you need to review or just a list of arbitrary characters. The list has some "kanji specific" features though, such as links to various Japanese dictionaries, which probably won't work if you store non-kanji characters in your list.
Anyway, feel free to use Kanji Lists as yet another tool in your big bag of Japanese learning tools.