Iris Coleman
Apr 08, 2026 21:43
Google rolls out notebooks in Gemini, syncing with NotebookLM for AI-powered project management. Available now for paid subscribers, free users coming soon.
Google is merging two of its AI tools into a unified workflow system. The company announced April 8 that notebooks are now rolling out in the Gemini app, creating a shared knowledge base that syncs automatically with NotebookLM.
The feature targets users managing complex, ongoing projects—students tracking coursework, hobbyists deep-diving into new interests, or professionals juggling multiple research threads. Rather than scattered conversations across different AI tools, notebooks consolidate everything in one persistent space.
How It Works
Users can create a new notebook directly from Gemini’s side panel, then populate it with past chat histories, documents, and PDFs. The system uses these curated sources alongside Gemini’s web search capabilities to generate contextually relevant responses.
The real utility comes from the cross-platform sync. Any source added in Gemini appears instantly in NotebookLM, and vice versa. This opens up NotebookLM’s specialized features—Video Overviews and Infographics—to projects started in the main Gemini interface.
Google offered a practical example: a student could upload class notes to a notebook, generate a Cinematic Video Overview in NotebookLM, then return to Gemini the next day to draft an essay outline using that same material. No file transfers, no copy-pasting between apps.
Availability and Limitations
Notebooks launch first for Google AI Ultra, Pro, and Plus subscribers on web. Mobile access and European expansion will follow in the coming weeks, with free-tier users gaining access after that.
Source limits vary by subscription tier, which could matter for users tackling larger research projects. Google hasn’t specified exact caps but points users to NotebookLM’s support documentation for details.
Fits Into Broader Gemini Push
The notebooks integration follows Google’s aggressive Gemini expansion over the past year. In January 2025, the company bundled Gemini AI features into Google Workspace subscriptions. The May 2025 I/O event brought Gemini 2.5 Pro with improved coding capabilities, alongside Gemini Enterprise features targeting business users—custom agent creation, enhanced security, workflow automation.
Notebooks represent a different angle: making existing Gemini tools stickier for individual users rather than adding raw capabilities. By creating persistent project spaces that span multiple Google AI products, the company is betting users will default to its ecosystem for long-running work rather than treating AI assistants as one-off query tools.
Google says more notebook features are in development, though specifics remain under wraps.
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