the world is moving fast — AI, climate, geopolitics. nobody knows what's coming, but the people who can keep learning will have more options than those who can't. the problem is that learning after school is hard. not because people don't want to, but because the internet became a firehose, AI slop made it worse, and nobody has time to read a wall of text.
i watched this up close at workera. even with an AI mentor that knew exactly what you needed to learn, people wouldn't engage. too long. too dry. life got in the way. so i started building the duolingo for anything — visual, gamified, bite-sized courses on whatever you actually care about.
retention was rough. but two things kept showing up in user feedback.
one: people lit up when they found someone else learning the same thing.
two: nobody trusted AI-generated content. they wanted to learn from sources they'd chosen themselves.
that led to domino. people aren't just struggling to learn new things — they're drowning in things they've already found and never returned to. the article you texted yourself at 11pm. the link you bookmarked and forgot. domino is where those go. you send it in, it gets distilled, and over time builds a picture of what you know and what you're curious about — and eventually, a way to find others in the same rabbit holes.
lotería is for learning what you don't know yet. domino is for not losing what you've already found.
domino is in beta — send us a note at aidana@dailylabs.co if you want in.