Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Mobile
  5. Photography
  6. News

Use your iPhone’s camera to turn textbooks from boring to easy to read

Add as a preferred source on Google

Content summarization app Summize has released version 2.0 of its smartphone application, which brings along with it a host of new features and tools for condensing textbook content and news articles.

Founded by 18-year-old Rami Ghanem, Summize got off to an incredible start when it was released two months ago, topping the App Store charts in numerous countries.

Recommended Videos

The success came at a cost. Summize didn’t anticipate just how popular its textbook-parsing technology would become. As a result, its servers became overwhelmed and caused issues for many of its new users.

Summize
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Immediately, Summize was pulled from the iOS App Store while its developers worked on beefing up the servers. It only took two days to get everything running smooth for its previous users, but rather than immediately putting Summize back up in the app store, the developers decided to use the break to improve the app from top to bottom.

Now, a month-and-a-half after being pulled from the App Store, Summize is back with a big 2.0 following its name.

Along with the update comes a new payment model, a completely redesigned interface, and five new features to further help users read through their summarized content.

Like its predecessor, Summize 2.0 works by letting users snap a photo of their textbook or news article and instantly receive a summary of the content. It’s effectively an app that can give you a Tl;dr version of your real-life reading material. And it only gets smarter the more it’s used, thanks to a self-teaching A.I.

https://twitter.com/rghanem1/status/732659652358340608

New in version 2.0 are a few additional features to further help users study and absorb the information in a more easily digestible manner. Specifically, Summize 2.0 includes a new grammar analysis tool that will run through the text of an essay and provide corrections, a new instant annotation tool for adding links and more to the summarized content, and even a flashcard tool for creating effortless flash cards.

One of the more welcomed additions to the update is a “save” feature. This will let users save their summaries for later viewing. Until now, any summaries were lost at the end of the session.

As for pricing, Summize 2.0 dropped its one-time cost and adopt a freemium model. New users will be given five scans for free. Once those allocations are used up, users are can pay $2 per month or $14 per year for unlimited summaries.

If users purchased the app for $1 when it originally went on sale as version 1.0 or 1.1, they’ll automatically be credited with a lifetime subscription in the 2.0 update.

Future plans for the Summize team includes expanding into different educational fields, such as history and chemistry.

Head on over to the iOS App Store to download Summize 2.0. If you’re the type of student this writer was in college, this will likely save you a few tenths on your GPA.

Gannon Burgett
Former Editor
The AI phone era is coming, and the weird brands may not survive it
The market once had room for strange, scrappy, genuinely good phones. AI could turn that room into another luxury suite.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

I have a soft spot for phone brands that made Android feel less inevitable. Meizu is one example, but there were plenty of smaller names with their own strange little gravity, from Fairphone’s repair-first stubbornness to Unihertz’s tiny oddballs, Shiftphone’s modular ideals, Murena’s de-Googled pitch, and Teracube’s attempt to make phone ownership feel less disposable. They weren’t always perfect, and some were never built to go mainstream, but they made smartphones feel alive around the edges.

Now the AI phone push is arriving, and it already looks less like a creative explosion than a cover charge. Meizu said in 2024 that it would end new traditional smartphone projects and focus on AI-enabled devices, which sounds futuristic until it starts feeling like a warning label.

Read more
I was in love with my iPhone Air, until summer arrived
Turns out slim phones and scorching summers don't mix well.
iPhone Air in hand

When Apple unveiled the iPhone Air, I knew immediately it would be my next phone. I have always loved small phones, and I stretched my iPhone 13 mini for as long as possible. But it struggled to keep up with my usage, so I had to upgrade. 

Since Apple no longer makes a small iPhone, the slim iPhone seemed like the right choice at the time. And honestly, it worked out well. While the iPhone Air is not as easy to handle as an iPhone mini, it is one-handable thanks to its slim profile and lower weight. 

Read more
The regular iPhone 18 may miss out on two major Siri AI features
Standard iPhone 18 might not have enough RAM to run some AI features locally
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Apple is expected to debut the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max this fall, possibly alongside its first foldable iPhone. The standard iPhone 18, however, is said to arrive later in spring 2027 with the iPhone 18e. While the lineup is expected to get more RAM, the upgrade may still fall short of what the standard and 18e models need for two advanced Siri AI features.

The issue is Apple’s AFM Core Advanced model. It powers Advanced Dictation Preview in iOS 27, along with Apple’s new expressive Siri voices. The model runs locally on supported devices, but it needs at least 12GB of RAM.

Read more