If you've ever watched a lecture or tutorial video and needed to hear the same explanation three times — you already know the problem. YouTube's built-in tools make this awkward: constant manual rewinding, no way to loop just one section, and notes scattered across different apps. There's a much better way to study with YouTube in 2026.

This guide explains how students can use InfiniteLooper to get significantly more out of every video they watch — from university lectures to Khan Academy, Crash Course, and beyond.

The Problem with Watching Lecture Videos Normally

When a professor explains a complex concept — a differential equation step, an economics model, a chemical reaction mechanism — they often do it once and move on. If you miss it or don't fully understand, you have to:

InfiniteLooper eliminates all of this.

How to Use InfiniteLooper for Studying

1. Find Your Video and Paste the URL

Whether it's a recorded university lecture, a YouTube tutorial, or an online course video, copy the URL and paste it into InfiniteLooper.tube. No account needed.

2. Set a Loop Around the Hard Part

When you hit a section you don't fully understand, drag the A slider to just before the explanation starts and the B slider to just after it ends. That section will now repeat automatically. No more manual rewinding.

3. Slow Down Complex Explanations

Speed up straightforward sections (2x for easy content) and slow down the hard parts (0.75x or 0.5x for dense explanations). At 0.5x, even fast-talking professors become completely clear. You'll catch details you'd miss at normal speed.

4. Take Notes Without Switching Tabs

Open InfiniteLooper's notes panel next to the video. Write your notes directly there while the video loops. Your notes stay saved in the browser — no tab switching, no losing your place in the video. Create a free account to sync notes across devices.

Study Scenarios Where This Works Best

Math and Science Lectures

Loop the exact moment a derivation or formula is explained. Slow it to 0.75x and write each step as the professor works through it. Set the loop to 20–30 seconds and watch it 4–5 times until you can follow every step without pausing.

History and Humanities Explanations

Loop a timeline explanation or cause-and-effect chain. Take notes in the InfiniteLooper panel. The combination of listening repeatedly while writing dramatically improves retention compared to watching once and taking notes separately.

Language-Heavy Content

For courses taught in a second language, slowing to 0.75x makes dense academic vocabulary clearer. Loop key definitions and repeat them until they stick.

Practical Tutorials (Coding, Design, Lab Techniques)

Loop the exact steps of a procedure. Watch the 30-second "how to do it" clip on repeat while you replicate it in your own code editor, sketchbook, or lab notebook. No more pausing every 5 seconds.

Tips for Maximum Study Efficiency

InfiniteLooper vs Just Using YouTube for Studying

FeatureYouTube OnlyInfiniteLooper
Loop a specific section❌ Manual scrubbing only✅ AB loop sliders
Slow down explanations✅ (0.25x–2x)✅ (0.25x–2x)
Take notes in the same view❌ Separate app/tab needed✅ Built-in notes panel
Share the exact clip with classmates❌ Link goes to full video✅ Shareable loop URL
Works on mobile

Frequently Asked Questions

Is InfiniteLooper free for students?

Yes. The core features — AB loop, speed control, and video notes — are completely free with no account needed. A premium plan adds unlimited saved loops and tag organization.

Does InfiniteLooper work with university lecture recordings?

InfiniteLooper works with any public YouTube video. If your university posts lectures on YouTube (or links to them there), yes. For private university platform videos (e.g., Panopto, Echo360), InfiniteLooper cannot access those as they are not on YouTube.

Can I save my notes for later?

Notes are stored in your browser by default. Create a free InfiniteLooper account to sync your notes and loops across devices — useful when switching between laptop and phone during study sessions.

Can I use this on mobile while at university?

Yes. InfiniteLooper is fully mobile-friendly. Open it in Chrome or Safari on your phone or tablet — no app download required.

Try InfiniteLooper Free

AB loop, speed control (0.25x–2x), video notes and shareable loop links — all free, no account needed.

Open InfiniteLooper →