While browsing the flashcardexchange, I wondered what DLPI stands for and found out this page while googling around:
http://www.dprkstudies.org/2008/07/25/k ... resources/
Also, I want to share a study tip I'm actually practicing. Flashcards! LOL Yes every body talks about flash cards but it's not just the cards. It's also about the systematic approach (also called Leitner System) which basically says: if you know a word, you put it a level up, if you don't know it, you take it down to the first level. Words in level one will be quizzed every other day, while words in the highest level every few months. Also, if a word is not quizzed within a given time, it automatically drops by one level. This really forces you to learn the words you don't know and doesn't bother you all the time with words you really do know.
Doing this with paper flash cards might be very complicated because you'll have to keep track on what date you last quizzed one given word, what level it is and when the next time it is due.
That's why, in my opinion, you need a software to help you. I didn't try this website but at a first glance, it probably goes in the right direction:
http://www.yoyobrain.com
However, the software I'm using is an offline-software. It is called "Parley" and is absolutely free. It natively runs on Linux (KDE) but also runs on other Linuxes, I'm quite confident it will run on MacOS X and I know somebody got it to run on Windows as well:
http://www.screenshots-archive.com/kde-windows-parley. For more information on Parley, here's the homepage:
http://edu.kde.org/parley/