u/lmnop_space

About these AI study tools…

About these AI study tools…

There are so many on the market.

I could sit here and tell you why mine is the best in my niche, but I won’t. Even though I believe it is, and feedback from anon users supports my claim.

Instead, I’d like to ask you…what do you see lacking in these tools rn? What do you *want* to see?

I’m just trying to simplify understanding and make it accessible, don’t know why everyone had to complicate learning so much in the first place.

Now, I’d be lying if I said I don’t want you to use lmnop…so if you try lmnop.space, let me know what you think. Yes it’s free. No, it doesn’t harm critical thinking—in fact, it’s designed with the learning process in mind.

reddit.com
u/lmnop_space — 13 hours ago

About AI Study Tools…

There are so many on the market.

I could sit here and tell you why mine is the best in my niche, but I won’t. Even though I believe it is, and feedback from anon users supports my claim.

Instead, I’d like to ask you…what do you see lacking in these tools rn? What do you want to see?

I’m just trying to simplify understanding and make it accessible, don’t know why everyone had to complicate learning so much in the first place.

Now, I’d be lying if I said I don’t want you to use lmnop…so if you try lmnop.space, let me know what you think.

reddit.com
u/lmnop_space — 13 hours ago
▲ 6 r/u_lmnop_space+6 crossposts

I kept running into the same problem as a student…

A 60-page reading would take hours... and by the end I'd either forget most of it or realize I never actually understood it. Same with endless slides or textbook chapters.

I tried AI study tools recommended on here, but most felt like "paste → summarize → done." I noticed that I was saving time, but I was learning less.

So I built something for myself.

It takes slides, PDFs, readings, etc. and condenses them without stripping out understanding. Then instead of just giving answers, it talks through the material with you:
• asks questions
• challenges your thinking
• checks if you actually understand it
• gives hints if you're stuck instead of immediately giving everything away

Basically: if you can't explain it, you probably don't know it.

The goal wasn't "replace studying with AI."

It was: save time without compromising learning.

Already using it for my own courses and over 100 students are using it too…all strangers that found it useful.

I'm curious — what's the most frustrating part of studying with AI right now? Over-summarization? Information overload? Feeling like you're learning less?

Also happy to hear any feedback from anyone that tries it out. Hopefully this will help you all as much as its helping me :)

Here’s the link: lmnop.space

u/lmnop_space — 3 days ago