u/damod5896

Image 1 — I built a study tool that actually understands what you're learning — would love feedback
Image 2 — I built a study tool that actually understands what you're learning — would love feedback
Image 3 — I built a study tool that actually understands what you're learning — would love feedback
Image 4 — I built a study tool that actually understands what you're learning — would love feedback
Image 5 — I built a study tool that actually understands what you're learning — would love feedback
Image 6 — I built a study tool that actually understands what you're learning — would love feedback

I built a study tool that actually understands what you're learning — would love feedback

Hey everyone — I've been building a study tool called Avenire for the past year and figured it's time to share it.

It's not another flashcard tool. The idea is more like "thinking infrastructure" for students — a place where your notes, PDFs, and study sessions actually connect with each other.

Right now it has:

- **Apollo (AI Tutor)** — asks you questions Socratically instead of just giving you answers. It retrieves context directly from *your* notes and documents, so it actually knows what you've been studying. No generic responses.

- **Visualizations** — Apollo can generate diagrams, charts, and concept visuals mid-conversation to help things click faster. Genuinely one of my favorite parts.

- **Browser Extension** — highlight anything on the web, save it straight to Avenire. It gets ingested and becomes part of what Apollo can pull from.

- **Mindset** — spaced repetition flashcards using the FSRS algorithm

- **Halo** — circle-to-search annotation directly on PDFs

- A notes editor with LaTeX support

Would love honest feedback from this community. Join the waitlist at [https://avenire.space\]

What do you wish your study tools actually did?

u/damod5896 — 11 hours ago