How a Pune UPSC Aspirant Never Misses Current Affairs

AIDular Team·June 14, 2026·3 min read

A UPSC aspirant can use a free AI research tool to get a clean daily current affairs digest and exam notifications straight to their inbox, without opening ten different websites every morning.

Here is how someone like Sneha Joshi, a 23-year-old UPSC aspirant in Pune, makes that work in real life.

The Morning Problem Every UPSC Student Knows

The alarm goes off at 6 AM. Before Sneha even has chai, she has to check The Hindu, PIB (Press Information Bureau), UPSC's official site, Insights on India, her Telegram groups, and sometimes a couple of YouTube channels, all just to feel caught up for the day.

That is not studying. That is just searching for things to study.

On a heavy news day, like a Union Budget session, a new government scheme rollout, or a big Supreme Court verdict, the tabs multiply fast. It is easy to spend 90 minutes just gathering material and still feel like you missed something.

The actual revision, answer writing, and mock tests get squeezed.

How Someone Like Sneha Uses AIDular

AIDular is an AI research assistant that runs on a schedule. You tell it what to track in plain English, pick how often you want updates, and it searches the web and sends you a clean, sourced report by email. No app to download. Works on any phone or laptop.

Here is how someone like Sneha sets it up. Three steps, no credit card needed:

  1. Sign up free at aidular.com. Takes about a minute.
  2. Type what to track. She could write something like: "Daily current affairs for UPSC: government schemes, international relations, economy, science and tech, environment. Also any new UPSC or MPSC exam notifications."
  3. Pick daily delivery. She sets it for 7 AM IST so the report is waiting when she sits down with her notes.

That is it. AIDular does the searching. She gets one clean email.

The Hinglish Angle

One thing that makes this easy for a lot of Indian users: you do not have to write in perfect formal English. A prompt like "Aaj ke important current affairs UPSC ke liye, especially economy aur environment pe" works fine. AIDular still returns a clean, well-structured English report. You ask in whatever feels natural.

What the Report Actually Looks Like

The daily email pulls together the key stories from that day, organized by topic: polity, economy, environment, science, international affairs, and so on. Each point is sourced, so Sneha can click through to read the full article if a topic needs deeper study.

If UPSC drops a new notification or a date changes on the official calendar, that shows up too.

On big news days, like when the monsoon session of Parliament kicks off or when a major bilateral summit happens, the report is longer. On quieter days, it is short and clean. Either way, she is not hunting for it.

Why This Matters for UPSC Prep Specifically

UPSC Prelims and Mains both test current affairs heavily. Missing a government scheme that launched two months ago, or not knowing the outcome of a key international agreement, can cost marks.

The problem is not that the information is hard to find. It is that finding it every single day is exhausting and eats into the time you need for actual preparation.

A tool that handles the daily search, so you can focus on reading and retention, is genuinely useful here.

The free plan on AIDular covers basic tracking. The paid plan is ₹399 per year, which works out to about ₹33 per month, roughly the cost of a single print newspaper for a month.

A Low-Pressure Way to Try It

If you are preparing for UPSC, SSC, or any state PSC exam and you find yourself spending too much time just hunting for current affairs every morning, it is worth trying.

Sign up free at aidular.com. No credit card, no app, cancel anytime. Set up one tracker, see what lands in your inbox tomorrow morning, and decide from there.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use AIDular to track UPSC current affairs in Hindi or Hinglish?
Yes. You can type your tracking prompt in Hinglish or plain Hindi, and AIDular will still return a clean, sourced English report covering the topics you asked about.
Will AIDular also send UPSC exam notifications and date alerts?
You can ask it to track official UPSC or state PSC exam notifications as part of your prompt. AIDular searches the web on your schedule and includes relevant updates in your email report.
How much does AIDular cost for a UPSC student in India?
The Lite plan is free and needs no credit card. The paid plan is ₹399 per year, which is about ₹33 per month.
Do I need to download an app to use AIDular?
No. AIDular works entirely through your browser and email. No app download needed, and it works on any phone or laptop.

Try AIDular free

Tell it what to track and get a clean report in your inbox: daily, weekly, or monthly. No setup, no card to start.

Get started free

Keep reading