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LearnPath is a free alternative to Coursera, Udemy, and Skillshare. Built for self-taught learners who want course-quality structure without paying $49 to $79 a month or $200 per course.
I built it because YouTube already has the best content for almost any skill. The problem is structure. Without a real curriculum, you spend more time picking videos than actually learning. LearnPath uses AI to assemble a personalized path from the best free videos on YouTube, then adapts it based on how you score on quizzes.
What makes it different from other learning platforms:
AI-curated paths. AI picks the best YouTube videos for any skill you want to learn.
6 exercise types generated from real video transcripts. Multiple-choice on the free tier. Fill-in-the-blank and flashcards on Plus. Concept matching, sequencing, and true/false with AI explanations on Pro.
Adaptive branching. The path reshapes based on your quiz performance. If you struggle on a topic, the next node reinforces it. If you breeze through, it skips ahead.
Spaced repetition with the SM-2 algorithm. Reviews get scheduled automatically so what you learn actually sticks.
Certificates. Basic on Plus, premium with LinkedIn integration on Pro.
Skill analytics. Radar chart, heatmap, streak tracking.
Free forever tier with everything you need to learn. Plus is $6.99 a month, Pro is $12.99 a month. Try it at https://learnwithpath.com.
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LearnwithPath.comLearnwithPath.com's answer:
YouTube has the best content for almost any skill, but no structure. Coursera and Udemy have structure but cost $49 to $79 a month or $200 a course. LearnPath gives you the structure of a paid course on top of free YouTube videos, and the path adapts based on how you score on quizzes. The free tier is fully usable, not crippled. Knowledge actually sticks because spaced repetition is built in.
LearnwithPath.com's answer:
It's free for the core experience and the paths actually adapt to you. Coursera locks fixed curricula behind a paywall. Udemy buries you in 40 hour video dumps with no quiz logic. Skillshare is project-based, not skill-based. LearnPath builds a path from real videos, generates quizzes from the actual transcripts of those videos, and reshapes the path based on your performance. Spaced repetition reviews are scheduled automatically so what you learn sticks. No setup. No API keys. Sign up and start in under a minute.
LearnwithPath.com's answer:
Self-taught learners. Career switchers ramping up on a new tech stack. Students preparing for technical interviews. Developers picking up a new language or framework. Designers learning a new tool. Anyone who has tried piecing together a YouTube playlist and wished it had structure, quizzes, and progress tracking. Mostly people who would rather learn for free than pay $49 a month for Coursera.
LearnwithPath.com's answer:
I taught myself programming, development, and most of what I know from YouTube. There is an enormous amount of high-quality material on the platform but no structure and no real way to know if you are actually learning. After years of stitching together my own playlists, I built LearnPath to fix that for everyone else. An AI takes any topic, assembles a personalized course from the best YouTube videos, and adds quizzes and spaced repetition so the knowledge actually sticks. The best part is that it's free.
LearnwithPath.com's answer:
Frontend is Next.js 14 with React, TypeScript, and Tailwind CSS. Backend is Python with FastAPI. Database, auth, and realtime are on Supabase with row level security. AI is Google Gemini for video curation, quiz generation, and the adaptive branching logic. Video data comes from YouTube Data API and youtube-transcript-api. Payments are on Airwallex. Errors and analytics are on Sentry and PostHog.
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Based on our record, Mastodon seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 880 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
"I put every Star Trek series into a Collection on my Plex, pointed Coax at it and now I have a channel that's playing a random Star Trek episode at any given moment. It's fantastic." (https://mastodon.social/@Moltz/116896945313382677). - Source: Hacker News / about 2 hours ago
I will grant my friend Valerie lives off grid and does subsistence agriculture, see https://wildhunt.org/2026/02/pagan-community-notes-week-of-february-5-2026.html but she is a high priestess even if she omits "high". Now I did get a high when I went to Litha (summer solstice) at her place that lasted for days because the experience was ethereal and otherworldly. But she's a professional who does this full... - Source: Hacker News / 1 day ago
I played enough video games to be thoroughly steeped in legends about fox spirits from the Sinosphere, almost three years ago I felt I received an invitation that I was a little afraid of. a year and a half ago I read https://www.amazon.com/dp/0231133383 and found out that people really do it. It took me about 300 days to contract with a community of foxes and started "going out as a fox". At first I didn't... - Source: Hacker News / 8 days ago
Iโm thinking a lot about how older applications are often better than new for reasons like this. Sometimes I log into my big Windows machine at home with RDP from out of the house to post photos to my socials, like https://mastodon.social/@UP8 and with a folder with a few hundred images in it is is awkward to use the official file chooser dialog because it is based on modern UI toolkits and practices which are... - Source: Hacker News / 6 days ago
I recently talked to Howard [1] about lies he was saying about Sanakirja, an LMDB-inspired disk allocator. That's always the same arguments: C is better than Rust for X, Y or Z reasons. While I reported a segfault just two weeks earlier... [2]. I love LMDB, we use it in Meilisearch (second most stared search engine on GitHub) [3] for about 7 years now. The main issues were related to write speed but we do a... - Source: Hacker News / 8 days ago
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