From Real Estate to AI: How One Leeds Grad Student Has Built a Smarter Way to Study泭
After more than a decade in the workforce, Alex Corren (MRelEst26) returned to college to pursue his masters in real estateand in the process he has built Lobe, an AI-powered, real-time learning assistant.

Alex Corren (MRelEst26) came to Leeds for his masters in real estate, but his pursuits took a surprising turn last semester when he invented , an AI-powered tool designed to maximize studying. Using himself as the platforms first test case, the results were clear: Corren earned a 4.0 GPA last semester. A Get Seed Funding micro-grant from the Deming Center helped him dive further into developmentand validated that his concept had real potential.
Next steps? Corren hopes to test the platform with a substantial number of users (know anyone at Leeds who wants to improve their grades?). He also hopes to tap into students marketing expertise to raise awareness through social media and other channels.
From necessity to invention
The proverb necessity is the mother of invention held true for Corren as he entered his masters program at Leeds after more than a decade away from college. The timing coincided with the rapid acceleration of artificial intelligencesomething he found impossible to ignore.
The AI coding tools were really starting to get good enough where people were talking about them, he said. I've been attracted to frontier technologies my whole life, and this felt like a very significant moment with a very disruptive technology. I made a conscious decision that I could either sit on the sidelines or start experimenting and get my hands on these tools.
While Corren never considered himself a programmer, building has long been a theme in his lifewhether developing professional projects, expanding his skillset, or even constructing his own home. Not knowing how to code always nagged at him. As an idea guy, he could envision countless digital products and services.
泭I've been attracted to frontier technologies my whole life, and this felt like a very significant moment with a very disruptive technology. I made a conscious decision that I could either sit on the sidelines or start experimenting and get my hands on these tools.
Alex Corren (MRelEst26)
Although I was very comfortable with technical things, I never learned to code. And that always felt like a blocker for me. Programming isnt something you can casually pick upits a pretty big commitment. But when coding in plain English emerged, a light bulb turned on.
It was like, oh wow, this is almost made for people like me Now I can action and iterate and prototype these ideas really quickly.
Corren spent all of 2025 experimenting and building. Lobe wasnt necessarily his initial goalit evolved naturally as he looked for ways to better manage his coursework. He was juggling Canvas assignments, downloading course documents, and experimenting with a patchwork of tools from his professional life, such as Otter, Notion and Granola.
Since I had been in the career world before coming back to school, and through my previous entrepreneurship efforts, I had been really into digital systems, organization, productivity, workflow management, and personal knowledge management, he said.
It occurred to me that there had to be a better way. Lobe was the answer. The breakthrough was realizing that he had access to open APIsjust like traditional developersto make it all possible.
So much of this infrastructure is widely accessible, he said. A bit of sleuthing later, he had built the prototype. Securing the Deming Center micro-grant gave him the confidence to keep goingand positive feedback that his approach was viable.
Turning a prototype into a practical tool
The Lowdown on Lobe
Lobe is Correns vision of an always available teaching assistantone that understands your classes, your professors examples, your materials, and even lectures as they are happening in real time.
Heres a summary of Lobes features.泭
~ Live lecture transcription
Lobe sits in on class, transcribing every word and turning lectures into polished notes. Students can even ask mid-class, What was that example the professor just gave? because Lobe hears it in the moment.
~Concept extraction and the Study Hub泭
The system identifies key ideas from each lecture and compiles them into a dynamic Study Huban evolving map of concepts rather than static flashcards.
~Spaced repetition learning
Lobe resurfaces concepts at optimized intervals, similar to memory tools like Duolingo or Quizlet, reinforcing longterm retention.
~Document and resource uploads泭
Students can upload PDFs, slides and course materials, which Lobe incorporates into its context for more accurate help.
~Conversational studying泭
A built-in chat lets students practice material in multiple formatsmultiple choice, open-ended, or through explanations. Its not static, Corren said. You can say, Give me another question, or, Explain that differentlyI didnt get it.
~A longterm archive of your education泭
Corren said one of his realizations while building Lobe was just how much learning gets lost once a semester ends. College is expensive, and the knowledge you gain is really valuable, he said. I didnt want any of it disappearing.
His own experience drove the point home. My undergrad notebooks are probably still sitting in a box at my moms house in New Jersey, he said. I dont have access to any of that now. With Lobe, you keep what you learnforever.
Of course, obstacles remain. For example, while Canvasthe platform CU Boulder uses for course managementhas an API, permission requirements may pose a challenge. Corren is in conversation with CUs IT team to explore solutions.
Hes also aware of the broader debate surrounding AI in education. But for him, Lobe has enhanced his learning, not hindered it. AI transcription, for example, allows him to stay fully present in lectures.
Its helped me be super present and lock in. I dont have to worry about taking manual notes because I know that Lobe is capturing every word.
Hes found that many students still use AI in scattered, inefficient waysdabbling without integrating their work into a cohesive system. And while some observers warn that AI may undermine genuine learning, Corren sees a fuller spectrum.
A hammer can be used to bash something, or you can use it to build a house, he quipped. Its the same with AI tools. You can outsource your thinking and fake your way through to a certain degree. Or you can use it to deepen your learning, deepen your understanding, and pay more attention.
The bigger divide, he argues, will come from differences in adoption.
The divide people talk about in the workforce isnt AI is going to take your job. Its Somebody using AI effectively is going to take your job. I think that starts in school.
He also noted that examsremote or in personstill require real comprehension. You cant fake your way through.
Whats next for Lobe?
Correns immediate priority is connecting with marketing savvy interns.
The reality is, I'm a 33-year-old dude who's never been on TikTok, he said with a laugh. I know there are people who are TikTok natives who could do a really good job marketing this. It's OK if I ask for helpI dont have to do everything myself.
He is also applying to the New Venture Challenge as he enters the next phase of testing.
His graduation dream? Lobe is big enough that I can go full-time working for myself.
At the same time, Corren hasnt abandoned his passion for real estate and regenerative communitiesa field he entered Leeds to pursue, taking advantage of the resources available through the Klump Center for Real Estate and Leeds' other Centers of Excellence. His own sustainably built home was just the start.
Im not banking on Lobe and putting aside the real estate opportunities. But working for oneself and the capacity for growth is promising. Apps like Lobe can scale quickly, he said, making it an attractive option over other career pathways. He also sees Lobe as a strong portfolio piece. Going into any career, people are looking at AI skills.
Corren knows the technological landscape is evolving quickly.
Software is fundamentally changed forever. Theres a window of time right now. Whether it lasts 12 months, 18 months, three years who knows? For large incumbent technology companies, the purely technical moat is disappearing these companies are actively under attack by indie hackers like me.
In the end, he believes distribution and taste will matter most.
If were inundated with AI slop, whats going to stand out is high-quality, tasteful products. Corren hopes Lobe will be one of them.





