Hey guys,
It's been fantastic watching you develop the site over the last year or so, and for the most part I think you have absolutely met the "suck less" criteria: http://blog.skritter.com/2009/08/styling-ch-ch-changes.html
However, one of the saddest developments for me was changing it "so that the audio doesn't play if the pinyin is hidden, so as not to give it away."
http://www.skritter.com/forum/topic?id=20778915
I could see where you were coming from then, it was kind of screwy trying to integrate it with the tone prompts, however i really would love to see this feature back. I've already been surprised at how much practicing with skritter has helped my audio comprehension-I'll hear a word and be able to see it in skritter and know what it means even though i don't feel like I'm paying that much attention to the audio as I practice. If it could be tweaked to require paying attention to the audio i would love it.
Especially now with the writing of pinyin and tones, I would love to be able to turn off tone only practice (somewhat redundant now) and get all the writing prompts as is + the automatic reading of the audio (when audio is available). I know I can click the sound button, but it just isn't practical to do for every prompt. I'd rather associate the writing with the sound rather than just the imprecise english definition.
I doubt everyone would want this, and I suspect you don't want to have to support to many different modes of practice, but it seems like a relatively minor tweak that could be buried in an "advanced" tab so as not to confuse beginners.
The other huge advantage to this that I see is that it would easily lend itself to implementing Khatzumoto style sentence practice - hear the audio and write the sentence (or know the definition).
http://www.alljapaneseallthetime.com/blog/chinese-project-notes-11-constant-improvement-srs-image-hack
I know chinesepod has a huge database of sentence text and audio... Maybe with every word you study skritter could suggest one or two sentences from the database with that word in it to add to sentence practice...
Sorry for the long post! Just something I've been thinking about.