Real examples
What Vaivox Study can actually do — concrete cases
No theory. Here's what really happens when you upload content to Vaivox Study.
- 1-hour university lecture on YouTube → an 18-page Studio guide with sections, key concepts and 12 possible exam questions. Time: 4 minutes.
- Wikipedia article "World War II" (EN) → a 12-page Studio with timeline, causes and consequences. Time: 3 minutes.
- Private Law handout PDF — 80 pages → a 38-page Advanced with main institutions, practical cases, typical oral-exam questions. Time: 8 minutes.
- Netflix documentary on YouTube — 45 minutes → a 12-minute MP3 audio summary to listen to on the bus. Time: 5 minutes.
- English Khan Academy video — 30 minutes → a guide in your language, ready without understanding a word of English. Time: 3 minutes.
Common mistakes
The most common mistakes with Vaivox Study (and how to avoid them)
Small details that make the difference between a mediocre summary and an excellent one.
- Video too short. A 3-minute video produces a half-page summary. Use content of at least 10-15 minutes for useful results.
- Picking the wrong tier. If you're preparing an exam, choose Advanced — not Studio. Studio is great for a complete guide, but for the exam Advanced adds exam-style questions and real cases.
- Uploading slides full of images. Slides with only bullet points or only charts give Vaivox little text. Better to upload the written handouts or the lecture recording.
- Not setting the right language. If you want the guide in your language, make sure it's selected — even if the video is in another language.
- Uploading videos with terrible audio. Recordings with strong echo, background noise or unclear speech reduce transcription quality. Prefer videos with clean audio.
Practical tips
How to create better guides with Vaivox Study
Small touches that noticeably improve the quality of the generated guide.
- Use dense, specific content. A university lecture on a single topic produces a far more useful guide than a generic video on "how to study".
- Combine multiple sources. First make the guide from the video, then upload the handout PDF on the same topic. You'll have two perspectives to integrate.
- Choose Advanced for exams. It produces 30-40 pages with built-in exam-style questions — equivalent to a full review of the subject.
- Wikipedia as a starting point. For a new topic, start with the Wikipedia article to get an overview, then go deeper with specific videos or PDFs.
- Share with classmates. Every generated guide has a shareable link. One makes the guide, everyone studies it — collective time saved.
Exam preparation
How to use Vaivox Study to prepare a university exam
A 3-step method you can use for any subject — medicine, law, economics, engineering.
- Step 1 — Quick overview. Upload the course lectures (YouTube or recordings) and generate a Studio for each topic. You instantly have a map of the subject.
- Step 2 — In-depth study. For the most important topics, generate an Advanced. You get a dense guide with exam-style questions already built in.
- Step 3 — Final review. The day before the exam, re-read the guides of the topics you remember least well for a quick review.
💡 Advanced mode includes questions typical of university oral exams — ideal for simulating the professor's questions.
University thesis
How to start a thesis with Vaivox Study
The hardest part of a thesis is knowing where to look. Vaivox speeds up the research and orientation phase.
- Explore the topic from scratch. Paste 3-4 Wikipedia articles or YouTube videos on the thesis topic. Generate a Studio for each. In 20 minutes you have a complete map of the topic.
- Identify the main threads. The most relevant subtopics emerge from the summaries — those become the chapters of the thesis.
- Find the bibliographic sources. Conferences, academic lectures and documentaries on YouTube are great sources. Vaivox turns them into readable material to cite.
- Upload the PDFs your supervisor gives you. Turn them into structured summaries — you instantly understand what's relevant to your thesis without reading everything.
Flexible study
How to study while you work or are on the move
Not everyone has free hours to sit down and study. Vaivox adapts to your schedule.
- Create the audio the night before. Upload the video or PDF in the evening, generate the MP3 audio summary. The next morning you listen on the bus, at the gym or while walking.
- 5 minutes on your phone. The generated PDF opens on any device. Even a quick read between commitments keeps your memory active.
- Listen at increased speed. The audio summary is designed to be dense but clear — you can listen at 1.25x or 1.5x to save even more time.
- Passive review. Even just listening to the summary without taking notes helps memory. Ideal when you're too tired to study actively.
Quizzes and questions
How to turn a lecture into exam questions
The most effective way to memorize is to test yourself. Vaivox automatically generates exam-style questions in the Advanced guide.
- Upload the lecture and choose Advanced. The guide includes a dedicated section with typical questions — based on the real content of the lecture, not generic ones.
- Use it as an oral mock exam. Read the questions aloud and try to answer. Then compare with the guide. It's a tailor-made mini-exam.
- Study with a classmate. Share the guide's link. One asks the questions, the other answers — without preparing anything by hand.
- Repeat on different topics. The more lectures you upload, the more questions you get. In no time you build a complete question bank for the subject.