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How It Works

1

Share Your Problem

"I wish there was an app for this" or "There's no good solution for this problem"

2

Community Votes

Others who face the same issue upvote it. The most wanted ideas rise to the top.

3

Solutions Emerge

Developers discover real needs. Your idea might become the next app.

Who Is This For?

🎓

Students

"There's no good app to organize my study notes"

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Professionals

"I wish something could auto-summarize my meetings"

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Developers

Discover real user needs and find inspiration for your next project

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Everyone

Share the gaps you notice in your daily digital life

3
Ideas Shared
34
Total Votes
8
Active Categories
Active filters:Tag: studying
3 ideas
3votes

Class notes end up scattered across too many apps and formats

During lectures, I take notes in different ways depending on the situation: handwritten notes, typed documents, photos of the board, or quick voice notes. Over time, these notes get scattered across multiple apps and folders. When exam time comes, it becomes hard to find all notes related to a single topic. Even when I know I wrote something down, I often don’t remember where or in what format. Existing note-taking apps are powerful but assume a single input method. There is no simple way to unify notes from different sources into one clear, searchable structure per course.

2votes

Creating a realistic study plan that actually adapts over time is very difficult

As a student, I often try to create study plans at the beginning of a semester or before exams. At first, the plan looks perfect on paper, but as soon as real life happens — unexpected assignments, quizzes, or personal issues — the plan becomes outdated. Most study planners assume a fixed schedule and do not adapt when I fall behind or need to reprioritize topics. Updating the plan manually takes time and effort, so I usually abandon it altogether. What I need is a flexible system that adjusts based on progress, deadlines, and available time, instead of forcing me to constantly redesign my plan from scratch.

1votes

I can’t keep my study plan realistic when unexpected tasks appear

I often create a weekly study plan with specific topics and time blocks, but it only works if nothing unexpected happens. In reality, new homework, surprise quizzes, extra reading, or family plans show up and my plan breaks immediately. When that happens, I either try to “catch up” in an unrealistic way or I abandon the plan completely. Most planning tools assume a fixed schedule and don’t help me reshuffle priorities based on what changed. I want a planner that automatically rebalances my workload when I miss a session or when a new deadline appears, without making me redesign everything manually.