Gemini provides Claude-style Notebooks for context and group
Abstract created by Sensible Solutions AI
In abstract:
- Google Gemini introduces ‘Notebooks’, a brand new organizational function that permits customers to group associated chats and add contextual information for improved AI responses.
- PCWorld studies this function may entice customers from opponents like Anthropic’s Claude by providing comparable organizational capabilities with NotebookLM integration.
- The function is rolling out to paid subscribers first earlier than increasing to free and cellular customers later.
In a brand new weblog publish, Google not too long ago introduced a brand new function in Gemini referred to as “Notebooks.” You’ll be able to consider a Pocket book as an organizational unit that retains all associated chats collectively (whether or not by matter, challenge, and so on.) and as a spot the place you may add contextual information that assist Gemini higher perceive what you’re speaking about.
For instance, if you happen to’re planning a giant journey subsequent yr, you may create a Pocket book for all these conversations. You may also add information like journey paperwork, reserving confirmations, insurance coverage data, want-to-visit places, restaurant lists, journey brochures, and so on. These all give Gemini extra context, which leads to higher high quality responses.
You may also sync Gemini Notebooks with NotebookLM, which suggests you may, for instance, create a visible abstract in NotebookLM after which proceed working with the identical materials in Gemini.
Notebooks is at the moment rolling out to paid Gemini customers, however will even attain free customers and cellular customers within the coming weeks. You may discover that Notebooks sounds so much like Tasks in Anthropic’s Claude, besides Claude Tasks are absolutely out there to free customers. The eventual free rollout of Notebooks may entice just a few Claude customers to modify over.
This text initially appeared on our sister publication PC för Alla and was translated and localized from Swedish.

