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Wow, it turns out that in 2025, you can just take a photo of a problem and get a ready-made solution. I had no idea that so many services are doing this. I tried a few — Photomath and Mathway really work, point the camera at the example, and within a second, you get a step-by-step solution. It's pretty good for math.
But then I found Wolfram Alpha — that's a whole different level. It doesn't just solve problems, it also plots graphs, calculates integrals. It also helps with physics and chemistry. The only thing is, in the free version, you can only input text; recognizing photos costs money.
There's also BotHub — it has several neural networks all in one place (ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude). Very versatile, but I didn't quite figure it out. For students, probably easier are Gauth or MathGPT — everything is intuitive and no registration needed.
Overall, solving problems from photos is already the norm. It'll be interesting to see what happens when these systems become even smarter. By the way, I saw something about Google’s Nano Banana Pro — they say it can even respond in handwriting. I haven't checked, but it sounds fantastic.
If anyone needs a tool for solving problems from photos, I’d start with Photomath or Mathway — simple and straightforward. And if you need something more serious, then Wolfram Alpha. Which ones do you use?