
Andy Walker / Android Authority
Tl; Dream
- Google’s Notebooklm Research Assistant already offers audio listings, which effectively create podcasts from your data.
- Now it looks like the tool works with video records, but exactly how they work remains speculative.
- Notebooklm can also offer a public gallery with curated “editor’s choice.”
Here at Android Authority we are some serious Notebooklm Stop. Google’s AI-driven research collaboration that debuted last year, and we haven’t looked back. We love Notebooklm as a productivity amplifierHire it internally to quickly refer to critical documentation and has been completely blown away by how cool to listen to “Virtual Podcast” Audio overview can be. Understandably, we are very happy to learn about what is moving on, and it sounds like Google may be about to take sound overviews to the next logical evolution.
One of Google’s more advanced AI efforts to appear has been Veo 2 Video Generation ModelLet users create short video clips based on their questions. Now Testingcatalog Has uncovered evidence that suggests that Google may be about to Supercharge Notebooklm with Veo 2-powered video listings.
The website pitched around Notebooklm’s network interface and managed to surface a new option in the correct “Studio” panel for video records, right next to where we are currently finding audio overview.

When it comes to how this can work, the report becomes much more speculative – it does not sound like any of this functionality is actually in operation yet. Right now, the videos you can generate with Veo 2 are limited to just several seconds long, and nowhere near the length we are used to from audio listings. It feels unlikely that we are experiencing a maritime change in that Google is able to achieve here, so maybe video overviews can merge shorter clips with longer, overall sound story.

In addition to uncovering what works against video overviews, Testingcatalog Also highlights a new category “Editor’s Picks” for stored notebooks. Although this does not seem to work yet, we can even talk about editorial curation easily suggests that Google is working in a public way of sharing notebook resources and highlighting the best and most useful among them.
Considering that this is the first one we see of one of these, it may still be a little early to expect to either be official at Google I/O. Later this month, but we can always dream.