Google Slides and websites may be read by NotebookLM, which is now powered by Gemini 1.5 Pro.
Last year, Google released NotebookLM, a note-taking tool designed to help students, researchers, and anybody else who wants to organize their collected data. In addition to the Google Docs, PDFs, and text files that were previously supported, users can now submit Google Slides and web URLs as sources.
Inline citations can point to your own sources to fact-check AI responses; you can have up to 50 sources per “notebook,” or project, and each source can have a maximum length of 500,000 words. The new Notebook Guide now examines sources in NotebookLM and generates study guides, FAQs, or briefing materials. Before this, uploading more than five sources was prohibited.
Because NotebookLM is powered by Google’s Gemini 1.5 Pro, the most recent large language model that powers the Gemini chatbot’s premium edition, users may now ask questions regarding charts, photos, and diagrams they have submitted to the platform. I had the opportunity to experiment with these features to see how they operated.