Learn from AI Experts
Yet another AI learning wrapper when Perplexity already does book discovery better.

AI tutor framework prioritizing pedagogy over PDF breadth—but still nascent vs Duolingo, Coursera.
Self-directed learners, students seeking structured AI tutoring, professionals upskilling on current events
Duolingo · Coursera · Khan Academy
While existing AI learning services have mostly focused on how much text inside a PDF the AI can read and answer from, we focused more on how the AI should explain and guide so that real learning actually continues. That’s why we aimed to make it feel less like a simple Q&A tool and more like studying with a teacher who knows how to teach well.
It’s also simple to use.
1. Enter what you want to learn, choose your level and the number of chapters, and a curriculum is generated.
2. Click the curriculum card you want and start learning right away.
3. Each chapter comes with both a tutorial and a chatbot, and the chatbot continues the conversation while understanding the context of the current chapter.
4. So even when a user gets a quiz question wrong, they don’t have to explain everything again from the beginning; the AI can reflect the situation and help immediately.
Lastly, to briefly explain why we built this service: just because the AI era has arrived doesn’t mean the quality of education has automatically improved.
In fact, we felt that with AI added on top of short, stimulating content consumption like Reels or Shorts, people often lose focus when trying to study.
So we focused on reducing the real problems that get in the way of studying with AI, like hallucinations, unstructured learning flow, and the limits of traditional education methods that still haven’t changed.
Thank you.
Service link: https://runtric.com/
Yet another AI learning wrapper when Perplexity already does book discovery better.
Type a topic and it returns a chapterized study plan, a clickable Cytoscape graph, and a one-click export that builds a YouTube playlist from the suggested tutorials. The streaming OpenAI responses + interactive graph give the experience polish, but the real challenge is content quality — relevance, date, and sequencing of videos will determine whether this is a handy study tool or just a tidy aggregator.
Educational content in a space where Nathan Lambert's RLHF book already exists.
On-device M4B packager for DRM-free files, but iOS-only and narrow scope.
Free TTS with BYO API key is nice, but Speechify and NaturalReader already do this.
Topic-based conversation generator when Talkpal and Lingodeer already do this.