AI tool comparison
Feynman Tutor vs Ithihasas
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Education
Feynman Tutor
You teach the AI — it exposes the gaps in your understanding
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Feynman Tutor is an AI skill (compatible with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf) that inverts the typical AI tutoring model. Instead of the AI explaining concepts to you, you explain concepts to the AI — and the AI plays the role of a curious student, asking clarifying questions designed to expose the exact places where your understanding breaks down. It's the Feynman Technique implemented as an AI interaction pattern. The Feynman Technique — named after physicist Richard Feynman — is one of the most effective known learning methods: to understand something deeply, try to explain it simply enough that a child could understand. Where your explanation gets vague, evasive, or circular is exactly where the gaps are. Feynman Tutor automates the "curious student" role, generating targeted follow-up questions calibrated to probe the weak points in your explanation. The skill works by analyzing your explanations for hedging language, unexplained assumptions, circular definitions, and jumps in logic — then generating Socratic questions in response. It's designed to be used alongside active learning (reading a paper, working through a codebase) rather than as a standalone teacher. With 6 stars and created April 14, it's brand new — but it's a genuinely clever use of AI that prioritizes your understanding over AI-generated content.
Education
Ithihasas
Explore the characters and relationships of Hindu epics with AI guidance
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Ithihasas (Sanskrit for "thus it was") is a web app for exploring characters, relationships, and narrative arcs across the Ramayana and Mahabharata. Built in a few hours as a Show HN project, it lets you browse the cast of these 100,000-plus-verse epics, understand how characters are connected, and follow story threads without reading the full texts. The app uses an AI layer to surface contextual information—relationships between characters, their roles in key episodes, family trees—in a digestible format. It's aimed at people who grew up with these stories culturally but find the full texts overwhelming, as well as researchers and curious outsiders wanting entry points. The project is a solo indie build with no monetization yet. At 126 HN points on launch day, it found a real audience. The comments included Sanskrit scholars praising the character mapping, parents looking for ways to share the stories with children, and diaspora users noting the gap it fills between formal academic resources and casual pop-culture summaries. Small project, real need.
Reviewer scorecard
“This is a genuinely better way to learn complex technical material. I've been using the Feynman Technique manually for years — having an AI play the curious student role is exactly the kind of force multiplier that makes it practical for daily learning without a human study partner.”
“Solid execution for a solo overnight build. The relationship graph and character cards are genuinely useful for navigating texts with hundreds of named characters. Would love to see this extended to the Puranas and eventually the full Vedic corpus—the underlying approach scales well.”
“An AI playing a confused student will inevitably ask confusing questions — not because of real gaps in your explanation, but because the AI misunderstood something correctly stated. You'll spend time defending correct explanations. The signal-to-noise depends heavily on prompt quality.”
“The Mahabharata and Ramayana have dozens of regional variants with meaningfully different characters and events. An AI layer that doesn't distinguish between Valmiki's Ramayana, Tulsidas's Ramcharitmanas, and folk traditions will produce confident-sounding but regionally misleading information. The sourcing needs to be much more explicit.”
“Most AI education tools optimize for generating explanations, not for building genuine understanding. Feynman Tutor represents a fundamentally different philosophy: AI as the learner, human as the teacher. This interaction paradigm will become a core pattern in next-generation learning tools.”
“AI as a gateway to pre-digital textual traditions is underexplored. The world's oldest continuous literary traditions—Sanskrit, Pali, Classical Arabic, Classical Chinese—are locked behind language and density barriers. Projects like this are the first step toward making those traditions genuinely accessible to billions of people whose cultural heritage they are.”
“The skills that compound over time are the ones worth investing in, and deep conceptual understanding compounds faster than anything. I'd use this to stress-test whether I actually understand the design systems and creative frameworks I use every day.”
“The visual design is clean and respectful of the material—not the lurid illustrated pop-retelling aesthetic that dominates. For content creators working in mythology, historical fiction, or South Asian themes, this is a fantastic reference tool. The character relationship layer alone makes it worth bookmarking.”
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