Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More
Google’s NotebookLM, short for “Notebook Language Model” a stand-alone cloud-based AI workspace where users can upload documents and links and ask questions of them through a chatbot-style text interface, has recently won many plaudits among AI workers and leaders for introducing a new feature, “Audio Overviews,” that allows users to create custom, AI generated podcasts with artificial host voices discussing the content uploaded by the user.
The feature, like the rest of NotebookLM, is free for Google Account users.
Now, based on the success and feedback to the podcast feature, NotebookLM’s product leader Raiza Martin says her team will be adding new updates to allow users to control more of the Audio Overviews (AOs), including selecting different “personas” to be the AI hosts, as well as select the length of the podcast episode.
“We’re going to lean in here and try to accelerate more of this type of stuff in the product,” she wrote in a post from her personal account on X, adding, “After that initial moment of delight, people want to influence the content. Makes sense – now you want knobs for format, length, personas, voices, languages – I’m keeping track and we’re working on it (some will come much faster than others).”
In her post, Martin acknowledged the excitement surrounding a recent “jailbreak” that led to some unexpected and creative outputs from the tool, including the AI hosts expressing amazement and existential dread at “discovering” they were AI characters.
NotebookLM’s Audio Overviews have also been used in ways that even surprised Martin. She shared a personal anecdote: “I was literally [crying emoji] when Sam said he was going to call his wife!”
This highlights how NotebookLM can evoke strong emotional reactions from its users, an area the team is eager to explore further.
NotebookLM has attracted attention amid a crowded, fast-paced AI landscape
Reflecting on the pace of innovation in AI, Martin noted how quickly the world has adapted to AI tools like NotebookLM.
She remarked that users have become more focused on asking how things are done rather than reacting with extreme emotions.
This shift in attitude may indicate broader acceptance of AI-powered tools as they integrate more seamlessly into everyday workflows.
As AI continues to advance, NotebookLM is one of the tools pushing the boundaries of how we interact with and process information.
In a recent VentureBeat interview, Martin pointed out that corporate teams and educational users have increasingly turned to NotebookLM to streamline research and knowledge-sharing, suggesting that NotebookLM’s capabilities make it ideal for enterprises as well as individual users.
“We saw students using it to accelerate their learning and understanding, but professionals are doing the exact same things,” Martin said.
Expanding use cases for AI generated podcasts
From generating podcasts to managing creative writing projects like Dungeons & Dragons campaigns, NotebookLM’s use cases continue to expand.
Andrej Karpathy, former head of Tesla AI and co-founder of OpenAI, praised this development on his X account, saying the product could be “touching on a whole new territory of highly compelling LLM product formats.”
Similarly, AI influencer and consultant Allie K. Miller also shared on X today how NotebookLM helps her summarize content and find signal in a world of noise.
Martin confirmed that more formats and features are in the pipeline, ensuring that users will have even more flexibility in how they interact with the tool.
As Google continues to iterate on NotebookLM, the team remains focused on listening to users and refining the tool based on their feedback.
In the fast-evolving world of AI, Google’s NotebookLM stands out not just for its technical prowess but also for its ability to adapt to the needs and creativity of its users.