Google has released an iOS app for NotebookLM, bringing its AI-based research tool for understanding large stretches of text to the small screen. Google introduced NotebookLM in July 2023, pitching it ...
Discover the ultimate 2026 workflow for organizing your notes using NotebookLM to process information and Obsidian to build a ...
Looking for a way to listen to your AI-generated podcasts on the go? Google has you covered with a new mobile app for iOS and Android that promises most of the features of the web-based program, "with ...
NotebookLM's best feature isn't the podcast — it's the adaptive quizzes that actually make you learn.
A listing for Google’s NotebookLM app has appeared on the App Store with an expected launch date of May 20, meaning the popular research assistant will go portable this month. May 20 is the first day ...
After several years of escalating AI hysteria, we are all familiar with Google’s desire to put Gemini in every one of its products. That can be annoying, but NotebookLM is not—this one actually works.
Planning a trip shouldn't feel like managing a second job. But between juggling flight confirmations in my inbox, restaurant recommendations scattered across Reddit threads, and half-remembered ...
NotebookLM has garnered quite a bit of love since its Google launched the AI app back in 2023. Since then, Google has continued to update its AI-notebook app with new features, eventually even ...
Why is this important? This update turns the NotebookLM app into a more active learning tool, helping users retain information more effectively with flashcards and testing their knowledge with quizzes ...
The AI-powered note-taking app now uses Google’s upgraded Gemini 3.5 model, which will allow it to respond with “more accurate and reliable information,” according to a blog post on Monday. Launched ...
NotebookLM is a genuinely useful AI tool, and it's coming to your phone. Unless this is running on your phone (highly unlikely, LLMs by definition, would use up all the storage and huge amount of ...
Nathan is a tech journalist from Canada who spends too much money on gadgets. You can find his work on Android Police, Digital Trends, iMore, Mobile Syrup and ZDNET. Nathan studied journalism at ...