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Vectora is an interactive learning platform built for students aged 15โ20 (GCSE, A-Level, AP, early undergraduate) and educators who want to teach through exploration, not memorization.
Traditional STEM education relies on static diagrams and pre-recorded lectures. Students watch โ but rarely understand. Vectora flips this by putting interactive simulations at the center of every lesson.
Explore concepts like VSEPR molecular geometry, electromagnetic wave propagation, Gibbs free energy, redox equation balancing, and more โ all through direct interaction.
Use Vectora as a classroom demonstration tool. Project simulations during lectures. Let students explore independently after class.
Built with Next.js 16, React 19, Three.js. Deployed on Cloudflare for global performance.
CapCut
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Vectora.one's answer:
Vectora is built around one principle: understanding through manipulation. Unlike traditional e-learning platforms that deliver content through video lectures or text, every resource on Vectora is an interactive simulation where students directly control variables and observe real-time results. We combine academic credibility with a modern software experience โ the interface feels like a professional tool, not a children's app. We also offer full bilingual support (English and Chinese) across both UI and educational content, serving students globally with localized experiences rather than simple translations.
Vectora.one's answer:
Most STEM learning tools fall into two camps: free but outdated (like PhET), or enterprise-priced and inaccessible to individual students (like Labster). Vectora sits in the middle โ a modern, beautifully designed platform at an affordable price point ($10/mo). Our simulations are built with Three.js and React, delivering smooth 3D visualizations that run in any browser with no downloads or plugins. We cover Chemistry, Physics, Math, and Biology in a single platform, while competitors typically specialize in one subject. And our founding price lock means early adopters keep their rate forever, even as we add more resources.
Vectora.one's answer:
Students aged 15โ20 studying STEM subjects at the upper-secondary and early undergraduate level โ think GCSE, A-Level, AP, and first-year university courses. They're comfortable with technology and want to genuinely understand concepts, not just memorize formulas. Our secondary audience is educators โ high school teachers, tutors, and lecturers who use Vectora's simulations as interactive classroom demonstration tools during lessons.
Vectora.one's answer:
Vectora started from a frustration with how STEM is taught. Too many students struggle with abstract concepts in Physics and Chemistry because they can only see static diagrams in textbooks. We believed that if students could actually touch and manipulate these concepts โ rotate a molecule, adjust the wavelength of a wave, drag a vector โ they would build real intuition. The name comes from "Vector," reflecting the precision and directionality of STEM thinking. We launched as a solo-developer project, focusing on depth and quality over quantity, and grew organically through YouTube and TikTok educational content that drives students to the platform.
Vectora.one's answer:
Vectora.one's answer:
Opus Clip - Turn long videos into viral shorts in 1 click
PhET Interactive Simulations - Founded in 2002 by Nobel Laureate Carl Wieman, the PhET Interactive Simulations project at the University of Colorado Boulder creates free interactive math and science simulations.
VEED - Simple Online Video Editing
GeoGebra - GeoGebra is free and multi-platform dynamic mathematics software for learning and teaching.
Adobe Premiere Pro - Edit video faster than ever before with the powerful, more connected Adobe Premiereยฎ Pro CC.
LABSTER - Empowering the Next Generation of Scientists to Change the World