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Turn Notes and Websites into Flashcards - Study Smarter with Gizmo AI | Tutorial + Review 2025

2.4K views· 27 likes· 8:02· Aug 28, 2025

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Unlock smarter studying with Gizmo AI, the ultimate tool that transforms study notes into smart flashcards, including webpage, YouTube videos and even Wiki! 🚀 This is perfect if you're preparing for exams, learning languages, or reviewing complex topics. Gizmo AI helps you understand, memorize, and quiz smarter, all in one place! In this video, I’ll walk you through Gizmo’s features, including: ✅ Turning notes, PDFs, and lectures into smart flashcards ✅ Active recall & spaced repetition for long-term memory ✅ Fun quizzes and study groups to keep you motivated ✅ Public decks to learn from shared study materials Stop wasting time rewriting endless notes. Study smarter, not harder! ⭐Join me on Gizmo: https://gizmo.ai/invite/3u2bcucf –––––––––––––––––––– 00:00 Introduction 01:31 Magic Import 02:02 Public Decks 02:55 Create: Flashcard 03:35 Learn: Understand 06:11 Learn: Memorize 06:46 Create: Study Group –––––––––––––––––––– Don’t forget to LIKE 👍 and SUBSCRIBE 🔔 for more AI tool reviews and study hacks! #GizmoAI #StudyHacks #SmartFlashcards #StudentLife #AItools #StudyTips #EducationalApp #LearnSmarter #EdTech #EducationalApp #AdvancedChatGPT #TechReview2025 #BestAITools2025

About This Video

In this video, I test Gizmo AI as a “turn anything into flashcards” workflow—your notes, PDFs, and even web content like pages, YouTube videos, and Wiki. The core idea is simple: stop rewriting notes and let the tool generate cards for you, then use active recall and spaced repetition to actually retain the material. I walk through the main flow from import to studying, so you can see what it’s like in practice if you’re prepping for exams, learning a language, or trying to compress a big topic into something you can review daily. I also show the parts that make Gizmo feel more like a study system than a flashcard generator: public decks (so you can learn from shared materials), “understand” and “memorize” modes for different stages of learning, and quizzes/study groups to keep you consistent. My takeaway: Gizmo is most useful when you’re dealing with messy inputs (lecture notes, long readings, links) and you want a fast pipeline from source → cards → repetition, without building everything manually.

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