Google is also expanding NotebookLM's limitations, allowing users to include up to 20 sources in their notebook, each with up to 200,000 words. The app, initially introduced as "Project Tailwind" at Google's I/O conference in May, was initially available to a small group of testers. Now, all users aged 18 and above in the US can access the app. This expansion comes shortly after Google revealed its GPT-4 competitor, Gemini.
Key takeaways:
- Google's AI-powered note-taking app, NotebookLM, is now widely available in the US and is starting to use Google’s Gemini Pro AI model for document understanding and reasoning.
- NotebookLM can summarize documents, come up with key points, answer questions about sources, and now has the ability to transform notes into different types of documents such as outlines, study guides, emails, and newsletters.
- The app will now start providing suggested actions based on user activity, offer tools to polish or refine prose, suggest related ideas from sources, and allow users to save responses from NotebookLM as notes.
- Google is expanding NotebookLM’s limitations, allowing users to include up to 20 sources in their notebook, each with up to 200,000 words. The app is now accessible to all users 18 years and older in the US.