You can eroticism pdfnow talk to Google's AI hosts that, in effect, will turn your meeting notes into a podcast.
NotebookLM, Google's AI-powered teaching tool, first debuted the Audio Overview tool in October. In short, it takes source material — e.g., meeting notes, diary entries, legal briefs — and condenses it into a podcast-like product where two AI hosts discuss the pertinent info. The idea is to provide a different mode of taking in the information, perhaps for the person too busy to read or who learns better via audio.
SEE ALSO: Google's crazy AI podcasting tool NotebookLM gets some upgradesNow, in theory, you could ask the AI hosts questions should confusion arise or you need more info.
Wrote Google in a blog post about the update to NotebookLM:
"Over the last three months, people have generated more than 350 years worth of Audio Overviews. Today, we’re starting to roll out the ability to 'join' the conversation. Using your voice, you can ask the hosts for more details or to explain a concept differently. It’s like having a personal tutor or guide who listens attentively, and then responds directly, drawing from the knowledge in your sources."
Google did warn that it's a new feature and that the AI hosts may "pause awkwardly before responding and may occasionally introduce inaccuracies." That's to be expected, considering AI introducing inaccuracies isn't exactly a new or novel problem.
You can find the new tool by clicking the "Interactive mode (BETA)" button on a new audio interview.
Topics Artificial Intelligence
Horror Story by Sadie SteinClaire Vaye Watkins Wins Dylan Thomas Prize by Sadie SteinSit and Cry with the Door Closed by Brian CullmanUnconscious by Sadie SteinOr, the Modern Prometheus by Sadie SteinUnconscious by Sadie SteinBluesky let users register usernames with racial slurs. The community feels betrayed.Borrowed Time by Michele Filgate7 meditation and mindfulness apps with free tools for coronavirus anxietyTesla starts production of long'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for July 17This Is Spinal Fusion by Rebecca BuckwalterLiterary Vigilantes, and Other News by Sadie SteinAuthors in Uniform, and Other News by Sadie SteinTinder will soon let you get background checks on your matchesLiterary Halloween7 meditation and mindfulness apps with free tools for coronavirus anxietyThe Great Columbia Book Slide of 1934 by Sadie SteinSex education is missing yet another crucial topic. We need to fix that.Beat It by Sadie Stein Having Trouble Sleeping? Read This. Letters from the Ransom Center’s Guy Davenport Collection Now Online: Our Interviews with Eileen Myles and Jane Smiley Who Is Professor Bhaer, Really? Part 4 of 5 Little Man of Nuremberg: Wonder in the Age of Matthias Buchinger On Delmore Schwartz’s “The Heavy Bear Who Goes With Me” What Havoc Did “Under the Tuscan Sun” Wreak on the Culture? Puzzle Deadline Extended on Grounds of Extreme Difficulty! Not Sorry: An Interview with Jeremy M. Davies On the Hundredth Anniversary of Henry James’s Death An Interview with Jonathan Lee Did William Blake's ‘Songs of Innocence’ Inspire Radoihead? Who Are You Calling “Delinquent”? On the Language of Debt Visiting the Automaton of Marie Antoinette Stolen Glasses: A Graphic Essay The Library of Congress and the Art of the Courtroom Sketch This Is (Literally) the World’s Tiniest Book Watching the NBA All There is a New Record for Most Bollywood Lyrics Ever Written, and Other News The Night Men with Their Rude Carts, and Other News by Dan Piepenbring
1.5662s , 8257.265625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticism pdf】,Unobstructed Information Network