MorsoMorso

About Morso

Morso is a free AI study app that turns any topic, PDF, or YouTube lecture into a structured course in 30 seconds.

Why Morso exists

Most study tools are built for people who already know how to study. They give you blank flashcards, empty document editors, or a chatbot that answers questions without ever teaching you. The hard part — turning a topic, a textbook, or a 90-minute lecture into something you can actually learn from — is left to you.

Morso does that work for you. Type a topic, upload a PDF, or paste a YouTube link, and you get a structured course with bite-sized lessons, quizzes built around active recall, and progress tracking that shows you where you actually stand. Free to start, no credit card.

Who builds it

Morso is built by Sheriff Oladimeji — a computer science student and solo founder. The first version shipped in early 2026, and Morso now has a small but growing community of students using it for exam prep and self-directed learning.

The why is simple: make learning easy. Most study tools either dump a wall of text on you (ChatGPT, lecture transcripts, textbook PDFs) or make you build the study material yourself before you can actually start (Anki, Quizlet). Morso removes that friction — type any topic, get a structured course in 30 seconds, work through bite-sized 2-minute lessons at your own pace. No prompt engineering. No flashcard setup. Just learning, broken into bites you can finish anywhere.

How Morso works

1. Type any topic, upload a PDF, or paste a YouTube lecture.Morso's AI reads the source material and identifies the core concepts.

2. Get a structured course in about 30 seconds. Bite-sized lessons (around two minutes each) are sequenced from foundational to advanced. Each lesson ends with quiz questions that force active recall.

3. Track real progress. XP, streaks, and mastery percentages show you exactly which concepts you have nailed and which still need work — instead of the false confidence you get from rereading notes.

Editorial & AI policy

Posts on the Morso blog are written by Sheriff Oladimeji, with AI used for first drafts and editing assistance. Every post is human-edited and fact-checked before publishing. Research claims about cognitive science (active recall, spaced repetition, cognitive load) are drawn from the published literature — Roediger & Karpicke (2006), Sweller (1988), Cepeda et al. (2006). If you spot an error, please email so we can fix it.

Get in touch

Feature requests, bug reports, or just sharing how Morso helped you ace an exam — all welcome.