Google upgrades NotebookLM, AI-powered research and writing assistant

Google’s AI-powered research and writing assistant is getting a big upgrade and expanding to over 200 countries and territories around the world.

Last summer, Google introduced NotebookLM, an AI-powered research and writing assistant. Today, the company is excited to share that it is bringing an upgraded version of NotebookLM—now using Gemini 1.5 Pro—to over 200 countries and territories around the world.

The goal from the beginning with NotebookLM has been to create a tool to help you understand and explore complex material, make new connections from information, and get to your first draft faster. You can upload sources—your research notes, interview transcripts, corporate documents—and instantly NotebookLM becomes an expert in the material that matters most to you. Today’s upgrade introduces several new features:

Thanks to Gemini 1.5 Pro’s native multimodal capabilities, you can now ask questions about images, charts and diagrams in your sources. NotebookLM will even include citations to images as supporting evidence when relevant.

With Gemini 1.5 Pro’s native multimodal capabilities, NotebookLM can now understand and cite your questions about images, charts and diagrams in your sources.

Case studies from real users

The range of uses that people are finding for NotebookLM is amazing. Because the product was developed in close partnership with authors, students,, and educators, there has been many early adopters integrating it into research and writing workflows. Best-selling author Walter Isaacson has been working with NotebookLM to analyze Marie Curie’s journals for research on his next book. There has been similar enthusiasm from documentary and podcast researchers who need to sift through complex archives to generate scripts or story ideas. But the combination of Gemini 1.5 Pro’s advanced reasoning abilities and NotebookLM’s source-grounding architecture has unlocked many other potential applications:

This Google Labs’ experimental product has also noticed some unexpected and playful use cases with the help of its 14,000 member Discord community, including novelists and fan-fiction authors managing complex storylines using NotebookLM, and the favorite: role-playing game enthusiasts consulting detailed descriptions of fantasy worlds for games like Dungeons and Dragons.

Getting started

If you’re new to NotebookLM, getting started is easy: When you first access NotebookLM, you’ll create a notebook and upload documents for a specific project or deliverable. At that point you can read, take notes, ask questions, organize your ideas, or ask NotebookLM to create automatic overviews of all your sources — a study guide, for example, or a table of contents. And with NotebookLM, the sources you upload are not used to train the model.

Whether it’s being used to build imaginary worlds, write bestselling biographies, or help salespeople find new customers, NotebookLM has given U.S. users powerful tools for making connections and generating insights out of large collections of documents. We can’t wait to see what the rest of the world does with it.

Exit mobile version