What if the same 60 seconds you spend doomscrolling could help you ace a test instead? NotebookLM’s newest feature makes a pretty convincing case.
NotebookLM flashcards are getting new controls for editing questions, changing answers, adding cards, and sharing decks, making Google’s AI note-taker more useful for students working from their own source material.
Google has upgraded NotebookLM with Gemini 3.5, a cloud-based code execution environment, and expanded file output support.
Google is making Gemini 3.5 the default model in NotebookLM
Huxe said that it has pulled its app from App Store and Play Store, and that it will stop working later this month
Google has rolled out automatic source labeling and categorization to NotebookLM. The feature activates automatically once you have five or more sources in a notebook.
Gemini now lets all free users create Notebooks on the web, a shared workspace that syncs with NotebookLM. You can store files, past chats, and sources in one place for smarter AI responses.
NotebookLM now lives inside Gemini, turning saved notes into active AI context. The update links chats and research in one place, pushing Gemini toward a more persistent, workspace-style experience.
NotebookLM’s latest update upgrades Video Overviews, letting you turn your research notes and documents into cinematic AI videos.
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A new custom banner image feature in NotebookLM may soon give diaries and research notebooks clearer structure, helping users quickly spot the right notebook instead of scrolling through walls of text.
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