Inspiration

We first thought of a product which can reach many people, especially people in school. We all had some trouble staying engaged when reading or studying pages of material, so we decided to make a tool to fix that.

What it does

We can take PDFs and MP3s and generate questions based on the content from them. We then display those questions to act as a study guide for our users.

How we built it

For the frontend, we used HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and ReactJS For the backend, we used Python, FastAPI, OpenAI's DaVinci model, and Google Cloud APIs.

Challenges we ran into

Our first challenge was thinking of a product that can serve many people - we wanted to think of a meaningful product.

Tony - It was my first time doing some full-stack work, so I had to learn a lot of things on the fly to help connect the project from each end.

Alex - Routing the data through multiple pages in order to keep from making a bloated template with everything on a single page.

Vivian - Having to balance aesthetics with functionality with speed, making the site easy to navigate, and have the website works well on all devices.

Accomplishments that we're proud of

We're proud of being able to make a product that functions well. There were many moments throughout the project when we were proud - the small accomplishments throughout the project came together to make a great final submission.

What we learned

We learned how to effectively plan and implement a project in a short time. We all learned new technologies and tools for this hackathon project.

What's next for Annai

We think that Annai is a project which has a bright future ahead. We have thought of business sustainability strategies and other features for the users, such as flashcard implementation. We would love to implement new features for our users.

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