MiniMax 2.7 is free on Zo
Productivity

How to Set Up a Plain-Text Flashcard System

Zo Computer gives you a personal cloud server where you can run code, build projects, and host services. Every Zo comes with a built-in terminal and file system you can use right from your browser—plus an AI assistant that can help you set things up.

One thing you can run is a spaced repetition system for learning. If you've never heard of spaced repetition, it's a learning technique where you review information at increasing intervals—seeing a flashcard right before you'd forget it, then waiting longer before the next review. It's one of the most effective ways to commit things to long-term memory, backed by decades of cognitive science research.

Why spaced repetition works

Spaced repetition takes advantage of how memory works. When you encounter information at just the right time—not too soon, not too late—you strengthen the neural pathways that encode it. Review too often and you waste time. Review too late and you've already forgotten. The "spacing effect" optimizes this timing.

People use spaced repetition to learn:

  • Languages — vocabulary, grammar patterns, phrases

  • Medicine — anatomy, pharmacology, diagnoses

  • Programming — APIs, syntax, algorithms

  • History, law, music theory — anything with facts to remember

The most popular spaced repetition app is Anki, which has been around since 2006. But Anki stores your cards in a database, and some people prefer something simpler.

Hashcards: flashcards as plain text

Hashcards is a newer spaced repetition system by Fernando Borretti that takes a different approach: your flashcards are just markdown files in a folder.

A deck looks like this:

text
Q: What is the capital of France?
A: Paris

Q: What year did World War II end?
A: 1945

C: The mitochondria is the [powerhouse] of the cell.

That's it. Q: and A: for question-answer cards, C: with [brackets] for cloze deletions (fill-in-the-blank). No special format, no database—just text files you can edit with any editor, sync with Git, and back up however you like.

Hashcards uses FSRS (Free Spaced Repetition Scheduler), the same modern algorithm now available in Anki. It's more accurate than older algorithms at predicting when you'll forget something.

Why plain text matters

Storing flashcards as markdown has real advantages:

  • Edit with any tool. Use VS Code, Vim, Obsidian—whatever you prefer. No proprietary editor.

  • Version control. Put your cards in a Git repo. Track changes, branch experiments, collaborate.

  • Generate cards programmatically. Write a script to turn a CSV of vocabulary into a deck, or use an LLM to create cards from your notes.

  • Portable forever. Markdown is a 20-year-old format that will outlast any app. Your learning data won't be trapped.

  • Share on GitHub. Make your flashcard collection public for others to learn from.

As Borretti writes: "Markdown files in a Git repo gives me a level of ownership that other approaches lack."

Setting up hashcards on Zo

Zo has a setup skill that installs and configures hashcards for you. In Zo chat:

Prompt
Run the hashcards setup skill

Within a few minutes you'll have:

  • Hashcards installed and running at https://srs-yourname.zocomputer.io

  • A flashcards directory at /home/workspace/flashcards/ with a sample deck

  • A persistent service that auto-restarts if it crashes

The skill handles installing Rust (hashcards is written in Rust), building from source, creating directories, and registering the service. You don't need to touch a Dockerfile or configure a reverse proxy.

Creating flashcards

Once hashcards is running, create .md files in /home/workspace/flashcards/. Each file is a deck.

Basic question-answer cards:

text
Q: What does FSRS stand for?
A: Free Spaced Repetition Scheduler

Cloze deletions (text in brackets is hidden during review):

text
C: [Spaced repetition] is a learning technique that involves reviewing information at [increasing intervals].

You can also add images, audio, and LaTeX math. See the hashcards documentation for the full syntax.

Tip: Ask Zo to help create flashcards:

Prompt
Convert these notes into hashcards format
Prompt
Create 10 flashcards about JavaScript promises

Hashcards vs Anki

Both are excellent tools. Here's how they compare:

  • Anki — The gold standard. Massive plugin ecosystem, mobile apps, cross-device sync. Uses a database format. Best if you want polished apps and don't mind the complexity.

  • Hashcards — Plain-text storage, modern FSRS algorithm, minimal interface. Best if you value simplicity, version control, and ownership of your data.

  • Mochi — Markdown-based like hashcards, with a more polished interface. Cloud-hosted with a subscription, or self-hostable.

  • RemNote — Combines note-taking with flashcards. More complex, aimed at knowledge management.

If you're happy with Anki, there's no need to switch. But if you've been frustrated by Anki's complexity, or you want your flashcards in Git alongside your notes, hashcards is worth trying.

What else can you run on Zo?

Hashcards is one of many tools you can self-host on your Zo Computer:

  • Workflow automation like n8n

  • VS Code in your browser with code-server

  • Remote development with your favorite IDE over SSH

  • Databases like PostgreSQL, SQLite, or Redis

  • Websites and APIs you build

Your AI assistant can help you set up and manage any of these.

Resources

More from the blog

Productivity

How to Connect Telegram to Zo

Chat with your Zo on Telegram. Same AI, same tools, same memory. Ask questions, run tasks, get agent updates, and manage your digital life from any device.

Telegram
Productivity

How to Automate Anything with Zo Agents

Set up AI agents on Zo that run on a schedule. Morning briefings, inbox summaries, price monitors, competitor tracking, and weekly reports, all on autopilot.

Productivity
Includes video walkthrough

How to Text Your AI

Text your Zo like a friend. Check your calendar, send emails, search the web, and run tasks, all from a text message. No app required.

Marketing

How to Build a Portfolio Website with AI

Build a portfolio website on Zo in 5 minutes. No templates, no drag-and-drop. Describe what you want and it's live at yourname.zo.space.

SMB
Includes video walkthrough

Build Your Personal Corner of the Internet

Build and deploy a personal website on Zo Computer in minutes. No hosting, no deploys, no config. Just describe what you want and it's live.

Marketing

How to Automate Social Media Posting

Let Zo draft, schedule, and post content across your social platforms automatically.

LinkedInX
Productivity
Includes video walkthrough

Create a Persona in Zo

Make Zo talk and think the way you want — create custom personas for any use case.

Data Analysis

How to Make a Daily News Digest Automation

Wake up to a personalized news briefing delivered to your inbox, texts, or Telegram every morning.

Productivity

How to Use Gmail Integration with Zo

Search, read, organize, and respond to your emails without ever leaving Zo.

Gmail
Project Management

How to Use Google Calendar with Zo

View, create, and manage your calendar events by just talking to Zo.

Google Calendar
Productivity

How to Use Google Drive with Zo

Search, read, and manage your Google Drive files directly from Zo.

Google Drive
Project Management

How to Use Linear with Zo

Manage your tasks, issues, and projects in Linear directly from Zo.

Linear
Productivity

How to Make Rules

Teach Zo your preferences so it behaves the way you want — every time.

Project Management

How to Use Notion with Zo

Search, read, and manage your Notion workspace through natural conversation.

Google CalendarLinearNotion
Productivity
Includes video walkthrough

Organize Your Zo Workspace

Keep your Zo workspace clean and organized — just ask Zo to do it for you.

Productivity

How to Send Emails with Zo

Compose, review, and send emails directly from your Zo workspace.

Gmail
Content Creation

How to Use Spotify with Zo

Control your music, discover new tracks, and manage playlists through Zo.

Spotify
Marketing

How to Use LinkedIn with Zo

Search profiles, check messages, and manage your LinkedIn activity through Zo.

LinkedIn
Productivity

How to Run Claude Code on Zo

Run Claude Code on Zo Computer. It's already installed. Connect your API key, SSH in from your IDE, and start coding on a cloud machine with AI built in.

Claude CodeClaude Code
Productivity

How to Run Hermes Agent on Zo

Run Hermes Agent on Zo Computer. Install the self-improving AI agent framework, connect it to Telegram or Discord, and bridge Zo's 50+ tools into Hermes.

Hermes AgentHermes Agent
Productivity

How Zo Runs AI Coding Agents for You

Zo can launch and orchestrate Claude Code, Codex CLI, and Gemini CLI in headless mode. Your Zo handles the git, the scheduling, and the delivery. The coding agent handles the code.

Claude CodeClaude Code
Productivity

Best ChatGPT Alternatives in 2026: AI Tools That Go Beyond Chat

A practical evaluation of the best ChatGPT alternatives in 2026, comparing Claude, Gemini, Copilot, DeepSeek, Perplexity, and Zo Computer across automation, persistence, data ownership, and deployment flexibility.

Productivity

Personal AI Agents: What They Are, How They Work, and Why 2026 Is the Year They Get Real

A technical breakdown of personal AI agent architecture in 2026: the observe-plan-act loop, persistent memory, tool integration via MCP, and why infrastructure, not intelligence, is the bottleneck.

Productivity

Which Zo Plan Is Right for You?

Compare Zo's Free, Basic, Pro, and Ultra plans. Find the right fit for your personal cloud computer based on AI usage, hosting needs, and compute requirements.

Productivity

How to Run OpenClaw on Zo

Run OpenClaw on Zo Computer. Install, configure Tailscale access, connect 50+ tools, and get your AI agent live on Telegram, Discord, or WhatsApp.

OpenClawOpenClaw
SMBBuilding

How to Build an API with Zo

Create and deploy API endpoints on zo.space — live instantly, no server setup needed.

Content Creation

How to Turn Any Music Article into a Spotify Playlist

Read a blog post, extract the songs, create a Spotify playlist—all with one AI command. Works with Pitchfork, NME, or any music article.

Spotify
SMB

How to Self-Host n8n

Self-host n8n free on Zo Computer—no Docker required. n8n Cloud costs $24/mo, self-hosting costs $0. Get a public URL and webhooks working in 5 minutes.

n8nn8n
Productivity

How to Run VS Code in Your Browser

Set up VS Code Server on your own cloud server and access your development environment from any browser. A self-hosted alternative to GitHub Codespaces and Gitpod.

VS Code
Productivity

How to Connect Your IDE to a Remote Server

Set up SSH access to your Zo Computer and connect VS Code, Cursor, or any IDE for remote development. Code on a powerful server from anywhere.

Data Analysis

How to Save a Webpage as PDF

Save any webpage as a clean PDF with Zo Computer. One command to read, convert, and save — no browser extensions needed.

How to Set Up a Plain-Text Flashcard System | Zo Computer