TiberiumAn Evernote alternative for students who want to actually study
Student notes have a specific shape: they grow fast during the semester, sit dormant during the break, and get heavily re-read during exam weeks. Tiberium is built for that rhythm — quick capture in class, clean structure for revising, and search that finds the lecture where you scribbled down that one definition.
Lecture notes that you can actually re-read
The hardest part of lecture notes is not writing them — it is re-reading them three months later and still understanding what you meant. A clean editor with consistent headings makes future-you a lot happier. Use one note per lecture, a clear title with the date, and headings for each topic the lecturer covers.
Study folders by course
Most students do better with one folder per course and a tag for the kind of note inside it: lecture, reading, problem set, exam prep. That structure scales from one semester to four years without falling apart.
Exam prep that is more than rereading
Effective revising means rewriting your notes in a denser form: definitions, examples, and the one or two questions you keep getting wrong. Tiberium templates make it easy to drop in a consistent revision page for each topic.
Research notes for essays and projects
For longer assignments, keep a single research note per source. Title it with the author and year, drop in the quotes and page numbers, and tag it with the topic. When you sit down to write, search by tag and your sources are right there.
Lecture
Date, course code, lecturer, topic headings, key terms, and the one example you do not want to forget.
Reading note
Source citation up top, three or four bullet takeaways, and a quote you can drop straight into an essay.
Problem set
Problem, attempt, answer, and the thing you got wrong — that last line is where revision actually happens.
Exam prep
One page per topic: definitions, examples, common pitfalls, and a self-quiz at the bottom.
Try Tiberium free
Capture ideas, organize notes, and publish shareable pages in seconds. No credit card required.
Sign up for TiberiumFrequently asked questions
Can I use Tiberium on my phone in class?
Tiberium runs in the browser, so it works on a phone, tablet, or laptop. Most students type lectures on a laptop and review on a phone later.
Is Tiberium good for STEM notes?
For text-heavy notes yes. For heavy math or chemistry diagrams, you may still want to pair it with paper or a stylus app for the diagrams themselves.
Is there a student discount?
The free tier is generous enough that most students will not need a paid plan.
Can I share notes with classmates?
Yes — any note can be published to a public page with its own link, perfect for study groups.