What does Gauth actually do?
Generic AI tools can answer school questions, but they often make students do too much setup before the help becomes useful. You have to phrase the problem clearly, ask for the right format, and hope the explanation comes back in a way that maps to the assignment. Gauth is built around that gap. The point is not that it has intelligence in the abstract, but that it begins from a homework context with step-by-step answers, calculators, and subject-specific pathways. For students under real assignment pressure, that tighter starting point is often more practical than a blank general assistant.
The product becomes more interesting because it does not force every need through the exact same interface. Atlas, calculator tools, writing support, and broader school-subject framing suggest a study workflow made of multiple entry points rather than one monolithic chat box. That can help students choose the right kind of help faster, which is valuable when they are bouncing between math, writing, and mixed homework tasks in the same evening. A broad school helper only works if it saves navigation effort as well as thinking effort, and Gauth seems intentionally built around that convenience.