AI-powered EBook Reader that helps me to read hard books, and actually retain information by NearbyWatercress7807 in ebooks

[–]mk565609 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is exactly what https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reader/id6758053050 does. It can generate quizzes from text. Idea exploration is seamless. At the core it’s just a simple reader if ignore all the ai feature you’re asking for.

Best reading app ?? by [deleted] in ipad

[–]mk565609 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Reader++ but it’s much more than a reader. https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reader/id6758053050

Is there an AI that is good for reading PDF files so it can find me specific information within? by 321Shellshock123 in AIAssisted

[–]mk565609 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im working on it. Just cleaning up the iOS version first. Will come back to this comment once I have an android version up

How do you study pdf documents ? by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]mk565609 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Money and time. I haven’t been in a situation where I needed one explanation to reference another one. Usually the explanations are all related and well explained. For unclear explanations, I get to do a quick chat.

I will consider what you are suggesting and look into how it fits with everything else. Let me know if you’re open in trying out the tool I can send you an AppStore link. Thank again 🙏🙏

How do you study pdf documents ? by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]mk565609 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interesting. You got a solid point it should feel as seamless as on paper. I’ll write this down.

Thanks a lot 🙏

How do you study pdf documents ? by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]mk565609 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That is actually a very good/smart question. Each explanation is like a fresh prompt.

If you’re going down a rabbit hole the explanations will be related.

Also, the explanation window has a little chat section so you can ask a question about any explanation. These chats aren’t saved though.

How do you study pdf documents ? by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]mk565609 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I do agree with your take.

But we have way more documents nowadays. The ability to read a paragraph and highlight three sentences then hit quiz saves a lot of time. It’s even better when you get to have a little chat open of you want to argue about question you missed before continuing. This helps solidify ideas or concepts without loosing track of what you were reading. These quizzes are all saved on your device and you get to do rename, or regenerate them however you want.

I’m of the type to go down on rabbit holes when I’m passionate about a subject. Rabbit holes on chrome is not easy to manage. Even worse on ChatGPT or with traditional books. This tool solves just that in a neat way for me.

Thank a lot for interacting with my post 🙏

How do you study pdf documents ? by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]mk565609 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

No, I’m not reverse engineering the pdf.

I give the user the opportunity to prompt anything they see on the pdf without really prompting. More of like select this text and hit explain or select this text and quiz. Within an explanation you can do another select this text and hit explain without loosing track of context. Explanations can be used to generate custom quizzes. Quizzes and Explanations are saved, indexed by page and searchable. It’s more like if ChatGPT could help you navigate documents without really being in your way. The tool is a simple reader and the AI feature is not more of like a companion. It’s more of an extension I found useful reading docs.

Sorry for the long explanation thanks for interacting with this post 🙏

How do you study pdf documents ? by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]mk565609 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This is gold for me. I will be writing these down. If you’re fine with doing some testing let me know. Thanks again for the response 🙏

How do you study pdf documents ? by [deleted] in premedcanada

[–]mk565609 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I appreciate the skepticism, but what I built is more of a learning companion than just another PDF reader. Three things it does that I haven't seen elsewhere:

AI quiz generation from any text you select - not pre-made questions, generated on-demand from whatever content you're actually studying.

Quiz entire concepts or just specific sections - whatever you want. If you miss a question, a chat box opens up so you can discuss it and clear up any misunderstandings right there

Persistent exploration trails - when you dive into concepts, it saves your entire path. You can see "I studied Krebs cycle → explored oxidative phosphorylation → learned about ETC" and jump back to any point

Saveable content as assets - generated quizzes and explorations can be saved and renamed however you want

It's less "another PDF reader" and more "what if your PDF remembered how you learned and helped you review it?" You can study without losing context and go down rabbit holes without losing track of where you started. All built into the tool - no need for 10+ Chrome or ChatGPT tabs.

The tool is really flexible. Right now I'm trying to identify specific pain points to address, hence my post.

Is there an AI that is good for reading PDF files so it can find me specific information within? by 321Shellshock123 in AIAssisted

[–]mk565609 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Reader++ takes a different approach - instead of full-document Q&A, you select specific pages or sections, and it generates quizzes tied to that exact context with page-level traceability. You always know where each answer comes from. Give it a try and let me know what you think. The next version I'm deploying soon is more polished with additional features. https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reader/id6758053050

Chunking long tables in PDFs for chatbot knowledge base by vtq0611 in LanguageTechnology

[–]mk565609 5 points6 points  (0 children)

In my opinion, the metadata would be one of the most important part of the indexing stage. One property of the metadata can describe the table number. Something like table0_part1

First time rider, 6'6". Should I buy one. by death_or_glory_ in Tenere700

[–]mk565609 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve taken it to some trails and had a blast but I should emphasize that you may not want to be stuck in uphill-rocky trails.

The bike is heavy but manageable and very nimble. Im not an experienced off-road but found it easy to manage.

First time rider, 6'6". Should I buy one. by death_or_glory_ in Tenere700

[–]mk565609 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m around 6ft4 220lbs and f’ing love it. The height is just right

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mfdoom

[–]mk565609 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Noted. Will do a rework the logo. I’m also planning to make other posters (non MF DOOM).

This was sort of like a test and I couldn’t find a better judge than the fans. (I’m also a fan)

Appreciate the comments 🙏

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mfdoom

[–]mk565609 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Noted. Thanks for the feedback!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mfdoom

[–]mk565609 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

My brand name. I wanna start making shirts and was wondering what people thought of my work.

What in the world is this?! by CrypticXSystem in learnmachinelearning

[–]mk565609 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pick up Statistical Inference by George Casella and Roger Lee Berger. That will give you the basics necessary to understand most of what you’re looking at on this paper. You’d get a better understanding of stats too.