Overview

Mesh Learning is one calm place to work through something hard. Your sources, notes, whiteboard, maps, and an AI partner share a single room, so nothing scatters across tabs.

Demo clip coming soon
One room
In Geometry: the whiteboard in the middle, materials down the left, Mesh open on the right.

The whole idea

Most tools scatter your work: a reading in one place, notes in another, a chatbot somewhere else. Mesh keeps it together. You open a room and everything is already in it - an endless whiteboard to think on, your materials down one side, and an AI partner down the other. Whatever you make is saved in the room, waiting when you come back.

Two containers, and that's it

Only two things to keep straight, and one holds the other. That's the whole filing system.

Subject
A broad area, like Math. A colored container that holds your workspaces and nothing else.
Workspace
One focused room, like Geometry, inside a subject. The whiteboard, Mesh, and every material for that work live here.

What a room is made of

A workspace has three regions: the whiteboard fills the middle to think on, your materials sit in panels down the left, and Mesh has its own panel on the right.

The whiteboardAn endless canvas behind everything - sketch a triangle, pin a diagram beside it, and show Mesh what you mean.
MeshYour AI partner, on the right. It reads your materials, searches, builds what you keep, and can draw a diagram back onto the board.

The board is always behind you - panels open on top of it, never replacing it. Choose what's open, resize it, or full-screen one, and your setup is remembered. Panels & bars covers every move.

Your materials, down the left

Six panels line the left side, each holding one kind of thing. Everything Mesh makes with you lands in one of them, so your work is always where you'd expect it.

MapsTurn a big topic into an editable structure of steps you and Mesh both work from.
NotesSaved writing - explanations, summaries, formulas, and practice.
ArtifactsInteractive pages Mesh builds for a topic when you ask.
LibraryYour source files and readings, kept close to the work.
ImagesDiagrams, photos, generated visuals, and every board picture you send Mesh.
VideosWalkthroughs and clips saved beside everything else.

Anything from these panels can become a Reference - a colored pointer you drop into a chat or a note - so Mesh always knows exactly which thing you mean.

A worked example

Say you're studying Symmetry & Tessellations. You make a subject called Math, open a Geometry workspace inside it, and ask Mesh to build a map that climbs from lines of symmetry up to patterns in art and nature. From there each idea has a home: a topic apiece, a chapter file pinned to the board, your own notes, and Mesh a panel away the whole time.

Where to go next

The tutorial follows the app's own order - one part of the room per page, each kept short.

  1. Home & Subjects - your subjects, and how to make one.
  2. Workspaces - the room where the work happens.
  3. The Board, then Mesh - the whiteboard and your AI partner.
  4. The materials panels - maps, notes, artifacts, library, images, and videos.

Tip  New here? Make a subject, open a workspace, and ask Mesh for a map - the rest of the room fills in from there.