47 sources into a lit review. 14 weeks of notes searchable in seconds. Connections your professor has never seen. This is what studying looks like when your tools are as smart as you are.
Research
You have 47 PDFs open in tabs and a 15-page literature review due Friday. Drop every PDF into Kent Drop in one batch. Connect your Google Drive and Kent also pulls the 12 papers your study group shared in the class folder that you have not downloaded yet. Kent extracts every author, methodology, finding, and citation into your knowledge graph automatically. Then ask it to cluster the papers by methodology, identify which three contradict each other on sample size validity, and draft a synthesis paragraph for each cluster. What used to take a full weekend of reading and re-reading now takes an evening.
Drop 47 PDFs into Kent Drop on Tuesday night. Wednesday morning, ask "Which papers use qualitative methods and what themes overlap?" Kent surfaces 12 papers, maps 4 shared themes, and drafts a 600-word synthesis with inline citations. Your professor asks how you read that many sources. You just smile.
Exam Prep
It is 11pm before your Organic Chemistry final. Somewhere in 14 weeks of lecture recordings and handwritten notes is the mechanism for SN2 reactions that the professor said would be "heavily tested." You cannot remember which lecture it was. Speak into Kent: "Find every time my professor discussed SN2 mechanisms." Kent searches across every transcribed lecture, every dropped handout, every photo of the whiteboard you snapped, and pulls the exact moments with surrounding context.
Voice query: "When did we cover Fischer projections and what were the three rules?" Kent finds it in Lecture 9 (October 14th), pulls your handwritten notes photo from that day, and generates a study card with the three rules, two practice problems, and a mnemonic. Total time: 8 seconds.
Discovery
You are writing a Psychology paper on decision fatigue and separately reading behavioral economics for another class. You have no idea these overlap. Kent does. Its background discovery engine silently cross-references everything in your knowledge graph and surfaces a notification: "3 of your Econ readings on loss aversion directly support your Psych thesis on decision fatigue. Kahneman (2011) and your lecture notes from Oct 3rd cite the same Iowa Gambling Task study." Your paper just got an interdisciplinary angle your professor has never seen a sophomore attempt.
Kent notification appears while you are writing: "Your Behavioral Econ reading on prospect theory (Tversky & Kahneman, 1992) uses the same experimental framework as the decision fatigue study you cited in paragraph 3. Adding this cross-reference would strengthen your argument." You add it. Your paper goes from a B+ to the only A in the class.
Automation
You have three exams in one week. Before bed, you tell Kent: "For each exam, pull all my notes and readings from the workspace, generate a study guide organized by topic, flag the concepts I have interacted with least (those are my weak spots), and create 10 practice questions for each weak area." You set Ghost Mode rules and go to sleep. By 7am, three study guides are waiting, each tailored to what you actually need to review based on your usage patterns.
Ghost Mode rule: "Every Sunday at 8pm, scan my Biology 201 workspace for any new lecture notes added this week, generate flashcards for new vocabulary, and append them to my running study guide." You never build a flashcard again. Every Monday morning, 15-20 new cards are ready, pulled from that week's material.
Visual
Your professor fills three whiteboards with equations during a thermodynamics lecture and erases them before you finish copying. You snap a photo. Most students lose that information forever. You drop it into Kent. Kent OCRs every equation, identifies each as a specific law or derivation, links them to relevant sections of your textbook that you already dropped in, and creates a clean formatted note with the professor's derivation steps alongside the textbook's explanation. Two months later, you search "entropy derivation from Lecture 7" and it is all there.
Snap 4 whiteboard photos during a Linear Algebra lecture. Kent OCRs the matrices, identifies them as eigenvalue decomposition examples, links them to Section 5.3 of your textbook (already in your workspace), and notes that the professor's shortcut method differs from the textbook. When you search "eigenvalue shortcuts" before the exam, Kent shows both approaches side by side.
Organization
You are taking Organic Chemistry, American History, Statistics, Psychology, and Spanish. When you ask Kent about "significant results" in your Stats workspace, it talks about p-values. When you ask the same thing in your History workspace, it talks about the Battle of Gettysburg. Each workspace maintains its own knowledge graph, conversation history, and source library. Connect your Notion and Kent syncs your class notes automatically -- no more dragging files manually every week. At the end of the semester, you archive four workspaces and carry your Spanish workspace forward. Next semester, you spin up five new workspaces. Three years of college, perfectly organized and instantly searchable.
Junior year, writing your thesis. You search across all archived workspaces: "What did I learn about research methodology?" Kent pulls relevant content from your Stats class (sophomore year), your Research Methods course (junior fall), and three papers you wrote. Your thesis methodology section practically writes itself from your own accumulated knowledge.
Semester Workflow
From syllabus day to finals week, Kent works alongside every app you already use.
Import syllabi from every class. Kent extracts every due date, reading assignment, and topic into your knowledge graph automatically. Five classes organized before the first lecture.
Take notes in any app you want. Share to Kent via Telegram, Google Drive, or drag-and-drop. Kent ingests every note and connects it to the topics, dates, and concepts already in your graph.
Ask Kent for a personalized study guide built from YOUR notes, not generic textbook summaries. Kent knows which topics you spent the least time on and prioritizes those.
Works with GoodNotes, Notability, Nebo, OneNote, Obsidian, Apple Notes, and voice recordings.
By graduation: 200,000+ nodes spanning your entire education. Carry it into your career.
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