powered learning platform
You've paused a YouTube tutorial for the twentieth time, rewound it another ten, and typed a screenshot's worth of code into your editor by hand, squinting to make sure you didn't miss a character. An hour later, you close the tab with a vague sense that you "got it." A week later, someone asks you to redo it and you realize you can't. Multiply that by every tutorial you've ever tried to learn from, and it stops looking like an occasional annoyance and starts looking like the default outcome of learning this way — hours spent, understanding gained in the moment, most of it quietly lost by the time it would actually be useful. That gap — between watching a tutorial and actually keeping what it teaches — is the exact problem AskMyTuto was built to close.
AskMyTuto is an AI-powered learning platform — a SaaS layer built on top of YouTube, the largest tutorial library in the world — that turns passive video-watching into an interactive, personalized learning experience. Instead of rewinding every time you have a question, you ask it right at the timestamp where the confusion happened, and you get an instant answer grounded in exactly what's being said and shown on screen at that moment. Lost your focus for ten seconds and missed something important? Instead of scrubbing the timeline hunting for the spot, you just ask what you missed and keep moving. It turns watching into a conversation.
For technical tutorials, Code Vault pulls code straight off the screen as real, copyable text — instead of a blurry frame you have to decode by eye and retype, hoping you didn't fat-finger a bracket. It also tracks how that code evolves as the presenter modifies it step by step, so you follow the reasoning behind a change, not just the final polished result. It's the most tedious, error-prone part of following a coding tutorial, handled for you.
A session doesn't end when the video does. AskMyTuto builds all of this out of your actual interaction with the tutorial: notes that come out of the questions you asked rather than a blank document you abandon by minute ten, a video summary that gives you the whole tutorial at a glance, a quiz pulled from the material so you can actually test what you retained instead of assuming you remember it, and a chat summary that compiles every question and answer from your session into one coherent record. Want to keep all of it, long after the video is gone? Export a PDF report built from your real session data — video title, chapters, questions, notes, timestamps — not a generic write-up that treats every viewer the same.
AskMyTuto doesn't try to replace the tutorial or the creator who made it — it sits alongside the video as a layer of interaction, making sure nothing in it slips through the cracks.
AskMyTuto leans deliberately into serving French-speaking learners as a core audience alongside English speakers, in a market most English-first EdTech tools treat as an afterthought at best — content and support that works comfortably in both languages from day one. But the underlying need — turning long-form video into something you can actually retain and use — is shared far more broadly: students learning outside the classroom, self-taught developers, hobbyists building a skill on their own time, professionals picking up a new tool for work. Anyone who already reaches for a real, substantial tutorial instead of a shallow "quick tip" video, because they actually want to understand something. It's a product built at the intersection of two things only growing: self-directed online education, and the creator economy that YouTube tutorials already belong to.
There's no free-forever tier, and that's deliberate — a tool like this only proves itself on a real tutorial you actually care about, not a limited demo with a video chosen for you. A 7-day trial with no card required lets you do exactly that before committing to anything. After that: Student at $9/mo (valid student email), Pro at $19/mo, Business at $39/mo, and Enterprise at custom pricing for teams and larger needs.
The idea underneath all of it is simple: AskMyTuto turns YouTube tutorials into skills, not just something you chat with. It would be easy to build a novelty that lets you "chat with a video" and call it a day — that's not the goal here. Watching a tutorial should leave you with something you keep — code you can reuse, notes and a summary you can study, a quiz that proves you learned it, a report you can come back to months later — not just a memory of having watched something once.






