I’ve been a fan of NotebookLM — Google’s AI-powered research assistant — for a while. But until recently, I’d only used it on desktop. Over the past week, I started testing it inside the Gemini app —and honestly, I can’t believe I waited this long.

While the desktop version is a powerhouse for deep work, the mobile experience is where it actually changes your daily rhythm. For me, it’s been the difference between “I’ll get to that later” and “I understand this right now.”

Sometimes I feel like I’m living in an era of “information debt.” I’m constantly saving articles I never read, recording meetings that I never revisit or staring at 30-page PDFs with a sense of mounting dread. But having NotebookLM on the go has changed my workflow significantly.

Here are seven ways I’ve been using it to stay afloat, prep faster and finally stop the “panic spiral” of information overload.

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Audio Overview — a remarkably human-sounding conversation between two AI hosts who discuss your uploaded sources. I’m no stranger to this feature on desktop and use it frequently, but the app version is arguably better.

The Workflow: I dumped my messy, bulleted brainstorms for a new project into a notebook and hit “Generate.”

The Result: I listened to a 10-minute deep dive into my own ideas while waiting in the school pickup line. Hearing your own thoughts reflected back to you helps you spot gaps in logic that you’d never see on a screen. Whether I’m on the treadmill or at my son’s soccer game, I can listen right from my phone.

IEP or a legal contract) can be overwhelming. My daughter has special needs and the amount of paper work that I have to read and understand for various meetings with the school often feels daunting. I always wonder if I’m asking the right questions and most importantly if I’m understanding all the jargon.

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The Use Case: Upload the doc and ask, “Explain this to me like I’m busy. Pull out all the vital talking points and include anything that I might need to raise as a concern.”

The Payoff: Ask for a list of action items or “hidden risks.” It doesn’t just summarize; it helps you navigate the density of the document. Note: NotebookLM is grounded in your sources, so it shows you exactly which page the info came from. Before meetings with the school, I’ll listen to the notes in the car on the way over. Total gamechanger.

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