Alexandria: Read with Virgil

Alexandria: Read with Virgil

A new way to read the classics.

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Alexandria is the first library where you can talk to a tutor — in the book itself — as you read. Move at a contemplative pace in Lightning Mode, then ask Virgil — your Socratic guide — for context, questions, or counter-arguments.
Alexandria: Read with Virgil gallery image
Alexandria: Read with Virgil gallery image
Alexandria: Read with Virgil gallery image
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OS Ninja
OS Ninja
Explore and Learn Open Source using AI
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Bobby George
Why We Built Alexandria The Library of Alexandria burned, and we've been rebuilding it wrong ever since. For centuries, we confused preservation with accessibility, mistaking the warehouse for the workshop. Our digital libraries became mausoleums: millions of PDFs entombed behind paywalls, great books reduced to files gathering digital dust. Alexandria emerged from a simple observation: people hunger for wisdom while the world's greatest texts sit unread. The gap isn't access—it's engagement. We needed to make ancient wisdom as immediate as a morning conversation. The Socratic Return Our core innovation sounds paradoxical: we use AI to restore what Plato warned writing would destroy—dialogue with ideas. In the Phaedrus, Socrates argues that written words create only "the appearance of wisdom" because they cannot respond to the reader's particular questions. Virgil, our AI companion, inverts this flow. When you encounter Marcus Aurelius's meditation on mortality, Virgil doesn't explain what it means—he asks what it means to you. More importantly, Virgil remembers. Your conversations build over time. He knows which concepts sparked your curiosity last month, which questions you're still working through, how you think and what moves you. A Guide Who Knows You Unlike generic AI that treats every interaction as new, Virgil becomes your personal intellectual companion. He remembers that you connected Stoic negative visualization to your meditation practice, that you struggle with Kant but love the pre-Socratics, that practical wisdom matters more to you than abstract theory. This continuity transforms reading from consumption into relationship. When today's spark arrives—perhaps Simone Weil on attention—Virgil might ask how it relates to the Buddhist concepts you explored last week. The conversation deepens because someone (or something) is paying attention to your intellectual journey. Lightning as Method Lightning Mode—our focused, neuroscience-informed reading experience—serves this relational approach. One sentence at a time. High contrast. Total focus, with Virgil always present and ready for you at your exact place. Virgil might suggest returning to a passage you read months ago, knowing you're ready to see something new in it. Daily sparks arrive each morning—single quotes that become conversations. These aren't isolated fragments but waypoints in your ongoing dialogue with Virgil. He helps you see patterns in your thinking, connections between disparate interests, the deeper questions you keep circling back to. What We've Learned Building Alexandria taught us that wisdom emerges through sustained dialogue, not information transfer. Our 4,000+ interconnected texts provide the raw material, but Virgil provides the continuity—the sense that someone is walking beside you through the library, remembering where you've been and helping you discover where to go next. Users describe something we hadn't fully anticipated: they feel known as readers. One wrote, "Virgil remembers questions I'd forgotten I asked. It's like having a teacher who actually sees my mind developing." We're most proud that Alexandria creates intellectual intimacy at scale. In an age of ephemeral interactions and disposable content, we built something that remembers and builds—a companion for the lifelong journey of learning. The ancients had their teachers and disciples. We're discovering what that relationship looks like when one half is artificial yet somehow still attentive. Zohar, Alex and Bobby
Zohar Atkins

My life has been enriched by joyful learning. Few things give me greater joy than sharing my love of learning with others. Which is why today is a momentous day.

We created Virgil to reflect the attributes of the professors we look up to, and wish we had more of in the world, Socratic, empathetic, and personable.

Excited to see this in the world.