
Oboe
Learning, for the curiously minded
392 followers
Learning, for the curiously minded
392 followers
Oboe is the world’s first generalized AI-powered learning platform. Oboe lets anyone instantly create educational courses to learn about any topic in a more personalized, efficient, and fun way than ever before.











Anchor
@nirzicherman I tried creating a course to see how Oboe works. I simply entered a title and the platform generated a full course with content for me. However, it was not the content I would include myself. I'm not sure if I'm missing something, but is it possible to edit the generated structure or define the main idea and materials before generation? I would appreciate support for structuring, content suggestions, and improvements, but I wouldn't want the tool to completely replace my input. Also, is there currently (or planned) support for creating courses in languages other than English?
Anchor
@anastasiiazhur Thanks for trying it out! Currently we don't allow editing, but it's absolutely on the roadmap. For all the things you mentioned: specific content, improvements, structuring. Also depth and range of coverage on the topic. It's a really great idea and something we hope to build soon.
With regards to other languages, we do hope to support them soon. Given our limited resources, we just haven't had a chance to do this yet.
Thanks for the feedback and for your question!
Congratulations on the launch! That's super interesting! As a life-long learner, I'll definitely try it. I just wonder, how to be sure that this knowledge is free from hallucinations/disinformation/wrong takeaways?
Anchor
@anastasiia_kiosieva That's a great question. We've invested heavily in building systems that fact check, via agents that audit and correct the output of other agents. This is an area we're going to have to keep investing it for sure. I'm optimistic we can get it to be very good (and hopefully even more reliable than so much of the disinformation that perpetuates in other corners of the internet where people learn today).
@nirzicherman Sounds great! Thanks for your reply!
Raycast
Really enjoy the process of creating new lines of inquiry on Oboe — which then branch into additional subjects or topics to explore.
Also interested in what lessons you're bringing from building @Anchor to Oboe...?
Nice one! I do like how the courses are separated out into different sections and styles (short vs long, audio vs text). Will you guys be introducing videos as well? Options to change the tone to suit what people are more receptive towards (funny vs casual vs formal)?
Personalizing education is a huge unlock. Excited to see where this goes!
Also, would love video to be a lesson format, but totally recognize that would have high costs.
Anchor
@matthew_glossop Thanks, Matthew! Video is on the roadmap, and hopefully coming soon. As are more granular controls like tone. Both are great ideas that everyone on the team wants to build so we can use those features too :)
@nirzicherman Great to hear!
Congrats! For educators, Obeo is great for quick, shareable, supplemental pathways to established curriculum materials. It provides great flexibility, especially for niche topics. That said, I'm surprised Obeo doesn't level-up text. I prompted it for a high school Bio micro-course on ATP, but the reading level was university undergraduate. Why is that? Also, I prompted Obeo for a 12-minute course on ATP and it didn't respect that request either. Since prompting is key to using this platform well, do you have suggestions to maximize Obeo's effectiveness and will you be refining it to better align with user wishes? Also, so you know, the podcast episode stopped after about 19 seconds and the remainder never played.
Showed up in my news feed this morning and I just tried it out! I teach culinary in high school and the my little course on sanitation and passing the ServSafe exam were useful. Now I'm figuring out how to integrate this resource into my classroom. It's early days of course (for me and for Oboe) but it feels like there are many ways this can help me teach my students the sit down stuff that isn't their favorite and easily create material for a niche subjects that don't have extensive online sources. My first thought is to just unleash my students to make a course of their own and share it with the class. Maybe each student could pick one of our classroom topics, create the course and we go through it together?