- Google presents prominent notebooks in notebook
- Cured content comes from sites like The Economist and The Atlantic
- You can ask questions about each notebook
Tired of waiting for you to use Notebooklm to make fantastic learning resources, Google has decided to take the matter in your own hands and produced a series of carefully selected notebooks of authors, researchers, publications and non -profit organizations carefully selected, including The Economist and the Atlantic.
With Notebooklm, you can read the original source material, but also ask questions to a chatbot that is versed in the material, so it can explore specific issues with greater depth.
And, of course, you can listen to the audio descriptions generated by AI, which sound as podcasts, for which Notebooklm is famous or explores the newest feature of mental maps.
The initial line of cured notebook Super agentsExpert analysis and predictions by 2025 as shared in The world ahead Annual Report of The Economist, and an advisory notebook based on the best -selling author Arthur C. Brooks’ How to build a life columns in the Atlantic.
As if that were not enough, they are launching the complete works of William Shakespeare for anyone who needs help to explore the works of the bard.
You can also expect the list of outstanding notebooks to grow. Google says it will continue to introduce new outstanding notebooks, including additional collections of their associations with The Economist and The Atlantic.
The books of the future
Google says that since he introduced the ability to share notebooks last month, “more than 140,000 public notebooks have been created, in a wide range of topics.”
It seems to me that these outstanding notebooks are dangerous because each one is a small burrow of rabbits that I can happily disappear for more than an hour.
For example, I opened the How to Build a Life notebook based on the columns of Arthur Brooks in the Atlantic and asked him how old it was better to buy a house, and I did not go out for another hour!
It is a different experience when reading a book, since it constantly changes to an interactive way of consuming means, which makes learning much more fun.
When commenting on the new outstanding notebooks, Nicholas Thompson, CEO of The Atlantic, said: “The books of the future will not only be static: some will speak with you, some will evolve with you and some will exist in ways that we cannot imagine now. We are delighted to associate with Google in their pioneer work on this front.”