Google added a public sharing capability to the platform by publishing an important update for the Notebooklm Artificial Intelligence Tool; A feature that can make it a key tool for teams, teachers and content producers.
Notebooklm, formerly just a personal research tool, has now become a smart and interactive notepad with public sharing. From today, users can make their notes publicly available with a simple link and do not need to log in to Google’s account.
Unlike ChatGpt, mostly designed for instant conversations and Claude with limited memory, Notebooklm has a lasting and shared structure that makes it a superior option for group work and knowledge documentation. The tool has recently won the title of “Best Research Tool” in the Tom’s Guide Artificial Intelligence Awards.
Public Sharing Features in Notebooklm
With this update, users can:
- Publish their notes with a public link
- Allow others to ask questions about notes through chat
- Access to summaries, FAQs, and even audio version of the summies
- Maintain the main content; Users can only read and ask, not edit
These features make it a good tool for classrooms, startup teams, research projects and public activities.
How to use Notebooklm?
Using Notebooklm is very simple:
- Go to Notebooklm.google and log in to your Google Account.
- Build a new notebook and upload your resources (including text files, PDF, Google Dems or handheld notes).
- Use internal artificial intelligence chat to get summaries, analysis and answer questions.
- Use automatic features such as “Voice Summary”, “Repeated Questions” and “Summary Documents”.
- Finally, by pressing the Share button and selecting the “Anyone With the Link”, let others provide the notebook.
Why is Notebooklm better for a group of ChatGpt?
ChatGPT works excellent for individual and urgent interactions, but the Notebooklm is built to store, organize and share information on information. This tool allows users to publish the knowledge generated in the form of an integrated, integrated booklet and does so without manipulating the original sources.
The addition of audio content, summaries and repeated questions has made it an ideal option for lecturers, toddlers, researchers and content producers.
Notebooklm has now become a public sharing capability, a simple research tool to replace Google Docs and even a serious competitor for ChatGpt in group collaboration.
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