Google NotebookLM - Al conversations on demand on any topic
Turn complexity into clarity with NotebookLM, your brain’s new best friend. Join the millions of students, creators, researchers, professionals, CEOs, and more who are saving time, getting stuff done, and learning in new ways.
Replies
Raycast
Big fan of NotebookLM — and now you can take it on the go!
Will this be the end of podcasts, or does NotebookLM serve a different use case?
Here are some options:
Download Audio Overviews for offline playback and listen to them anytime anywhere.
Add sources from anywhere on your device: When viewing a website, PDF, or YouTube video, regardless of the app you’re in, just tap the share icon and select NotebookLM to add it as a new source.
Interactive Audio Overviews: When you have connectivity, tap "Join" to ask the AI hosts a question, request clarification, or steer them in a new direction.
Tidyread
NotebookLM has completely transformed how I learn and get things done, turning complex ideas into clear insights.
Chance AI
As a researcher and content creator, I've been using NotebookLM since its launch, and it's fundamentally changed how I process and synthesize information. This isn't just another AI chat tool - it's like having a research assistant who actually remembers and builds upon previous conversations.
Just yesterday, I was working on a complex article about quantum computing. I uploaded several research papers, and NotebookLM not only understood the technical content but helped me identify connections between papers I hadn't noticed. The way it maintains context across multiple sessions is remarkable - it remembered detailed points from our previous discussions about quantum entanglement and incorporated them naturally into new explanations.
The killer feature for me is how it handles source attribution. Unlike other AI tools, it actually keeps track of where specific information came from and can point you back to the original text. This has saved me countless hours of fact-checking and citation work.
Pro tip: Create separate notebooks for different projects and use the "suggested questions" feature - it often surfaces angles you might not have considered. I've found it particularly useful for breaking down dense academic papers into more digestible concepts.
For anyone doing research, writing, or trying to learn complex topics, this tool is invaluable. The free version is surprisingly robust. Would love to connect with other researchers using this - particularly interested in hearing how others are structuring their notebooks for different types of projects.