Tue May 20 16:20:00 UTC 2025: Okay, here’s a news article summarizing the information, followed by a separate summary of the entire text:
**News Article:**
**Google Launches NotebookLM Mobile Apps Ahead of I/O 2025**
**Mountain View, CA –** Just ahead of its annual I/O developer conference in 2025, Google has released mobile applications for its AI-powered note-taking tool, NotebookLM, on both Android and iOS platforms. Originally launched in 2023, NotebookLM leverages the power of Gemini to enable users to upload notes, documents, and even YouTube videos, and then automatically generate summaries, answer questions, and create AI-generated podcasts based on the content.
The apps, available now on the Google Play Store and Apple App Store, provide a streamlined mobile interface for accessing and managing notebooks. Users can easily create new notebooks by uploading PDFs, website links, text files, or YouTube videos. The mobile version also incorporates popular features like Audio Overviews, allowing users to listen to AI-generated summaries. The new mobile version will also allow users to download podcasts for offline listening.
The app’s “Interactive” mode allows users to engage directly with the AI-generated content, posing questions and receiving real-time responses.
While the mobile interface mirrors the NotebookLM website, some advanced functionalities found on the web version are not yet available in the apps. Google promises ongoing updates and feature additions in the future.
**Separate Summary of entire text including unrelated information:**
Google launched NotebookLM apps for Android and iOS ahead of I/O 2025, allowing users to upload notes and generate summaries, answer questions, and create AI-generated podcasts using Gemini. The mobile apps offer access to notebooks, creation of new notebooks from various sources (PDFs, websites, text, YouTube videos), and features like Audio Overviews, podcast generation, and “Interactive” mode. The apps also include offline listening for podcasts. In separate news, India’s Foreign Secretary told Parliament that the recent conflict with Pakistan was conventional and not nuclear, a mutual ceasefire was achieved without US involvement, and Pakistan wasn’t informed about Operation Sindoor.