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Google's NotebookLM can now make narrated slideshows with AI

Google's NotebookLM can now make narrated slideshows with AI

The Vergea day ago
Google's NotebookLM is getting a new Video Overviews feature that uses AI to create slideshows with narration. The feature is rolling out now in English, and Google says that support for 'more languages' is coming soon.
'You can think of these as a visual alternative to Audio Overviews: the AI host creates new visuals to help illustrate points while also pulling in images, diagrams, quotes and numbers from your documents,' according to a blog post. 'This makes it uniquely effective for explaining data, demonstrating processes and making abstract concepts more tangible.' Google plans to introduce 'additional formats' in the future. Based on a demo video, Video Overviews have handy playback controls like the ability to skip back and forth by 10 seconds and set playback speed.
Google is also announcing updates to NotebookLM's Studio tab, which is where you can have the app generate things like Audio and Video Overviews, study guides, and briefing documents. The biggest change is that you'll be able to 'create and store multiple studio outputs of the same type in a single notebook,' meaning you can make multiple Audio Overviews all referencing information from the notebook you're working from.
The Studio tab is getting a visual refresh, too — it will have four tiles at the top for making Audio Overviews, Video Overviews, Mind Maps, and Reports, Google says. The Studio changes will roll out 'over the next few weeks' to all users.
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From chaos to clarity: How Skylight Calendar brings order to my schedule
From chaos to clarity: How Skylight Calendar brings order to my schedule

New York Post

time9 minutes ago

  • New York Post

From chaos to clarity: How Skylight Calendar brings order to my schedule

New York Post may be compensated and/or receive an affiliate commission if you click or buy through our links. Featured pricing is subject to change. If your fridge is doubling as a chaotic command center — covered in color-coded calendars, cryptic reminders, and a grocery list from three weeks ago — it might be time to level up. Say hello to the Skylight Calendar, the digital sidekick you never knew you needed but now can't live without. Picture this: a sleek digital screen perched on your wall, puting every other planning system to shame, obliterating it with style, smarts and a sprinkle of tech magic. Now, I'll be honest, I approached this little gadget with a healthy dose of skepticism. My Type-A personality has tried the planners and apps, but the Skylight? This slim, professional-grade system may have presented itself with the poise of Mary Poppins and the brain of Albert Einstein, but I wanted to know if it worked for someone like me. Advertisement In the paragraphs ahead, I'll dive into the features, pros, cons and whether this digital dynamo deserves a permanent spot in your home. Spoiler: it may just become the family member you never knew you needed. What is the Skylight Calendar? But before I launch into full-on calendar evangelism, let's rewind. What exactly is this magical time-organizing box? Amazon Pros: Effortless to set up and sync with your calendars (Google, Apple, Outlook) in just a few steps Beyond just scheduling, it's also a meal planner and grocery list keeper, wedding checklist, brain dump list and photo frame all in one Clean, color-coded interface and touchscreen-responsive. Plus, the frame looks sleek and fits nicely into home decor Cons: Requires constant power and WiFi, which could be a dealbreaker for some shoppers No voice activation (like, 'hey, Alexa!') App meal planning feature sometimes lags The Skylight Calendar is a digital touchscreen display that syncs with all your existing calendars — including Google, Outlook and Apple — to serve as a central hub for all of your brain dumping needs. Unlike your phone or computer, it's designed to be shared. Mounted on your wall or propped on a counter, and turns your entire household into a synchronized symphony of appointments, birthdays, and chore charts. In terms of aesthetics, this thing looks good. Its modern-day charm is void of garish colors and blinking lights. With Skylight, you'll only find a clean, minimalist design that shows that you have your life together. Dimensions: 9.9″W x 1.4″H My Review Victoria Giardina I never thought I'd say this about a digital calendar, but the Skylight Calendar has genuinely made life feel a little more poetic. My fiancé and I picked it up during the thick of wedding planning chaos, thinking we just needed a place to dump our checklists and shared appointments. But it turned into something way more layered, kind of like a family command center mixed with a warm daily ritual. Set Up Setting it up was refreshingly painless, which I appreciated because my attention span starts to dissolve when tech gets too complicated. You plug it in, connect to Wi-Fi, and then sync it to your existing calendars — Google, Outlook, Apple, whatever your flavor is. We had our shared Google Calendar connected in less than five minutes. From there, it pulled in all of our events like magic, and just like that, we were off to the races. No extra logins, no endless 'now click this' steps; it was like the calendar wanted to work with us. Victoria Giardina The touchscreen is surprisingly responsive. It doesn't lag like you might expect from a digital display this size, and the interface is clear, colorful, and just customizable enough to feel personal without requiring a graphic design degree. We set our calendar to show the full week view because it helps us keep track of our rhythm: meals, workouts, errands, date nights, and now, an ever-growing list of wedding to-dos. Features One of the most underrated features is how the Skylight lets you create multiple calendars and toggle them on or off. My fiance and I have one for appointments, one for workouts, one strictly for wedding stuff, and another for fun things, like concerts, friend hangouts, and weekend trips. It keeps us from feeling overwhelmed. If I'm just trying to figure out when we're free for dinner next week, I don't need to mentally sift through dentist appointments and color-coded vendor calls. I just tap and filter, and the stress from planning melts a bit. We also share the grocery list function like a digital baton. When either of us notices we're out of almond milk or parsley or whatever, we just type it in on the Skylight or the mobile app. Whoever ends up at the store has the list ready to go, all without frantic texts. Setting Up Meal Planning Setting up meal planning on my Skylight Calendar was surprisingly straightforward and has become one of my favorite features. First, I made sure I had the Plus subscription, since meal planning tools are only available with the premium plan. Once I had that activated, I opened the Skylight app and navigated to the 'Meals' section. From there, I could begin adding meals for specific days and times. I loved that I could assign breakfast, lunch, dinner, or snacks to each day and even include notes. What really stood out to me was how easy it was to import recipes. Skylight lets me copy a link from any recipe site — like AllRecipes or even Pinterest — and it automatically pulls in the ingredients and instructions. It's also smart enough to recognize meal types and suggest slots for them on my calendar. I can drag and drop meals into my weekly view and even repeat meals I've previously saved. It helps me stay organized and cuts down on last-minute dinner stress, especially during busy weeks. Another feature I've come to rely on is the grocery list integration. When I add a meal, I can choose to send its ingredients directly to my shopping list. That list syncs across all family devices, so whoever's at the store can check things off in real time. It's made meal prep feel less like a solo task and more like a shared responsibility. Overall, meal planning on the Skylight Calendar has made our kitchen more efficient and our weeknights calmer. Automatic Software Updates One of the best low-maintenance perks of the Skylight Calendar is its automatic software updates. You don't have to worry about manually downloading or installing anything. Updates happen quietly in the background, usually overnight, so your device is always running the latest features and improvements without lifting a finger. Whether it's new layout options, better syncing capabilities or bug fixes, Skylight keeps things fresh and functional without disrupting your routine. Creating Profiles Skylight allows you to have different profiles, and the setup for that is also quick and painless. Just tap 'Add Profile,' choose a name, pick a color and you're good to go. You can add as many profiles as you need, and they all stay synced across your Skylight device and app. It's especially helpful for busy households where everyone's juggling their personal calendar. If used with the Skylight Plus subscription, profiles can also tie into meal planning and chore tracking, making it easier to personalize routines. It's like giving each person their own mini calendar within the bigger family view. Organized, colorful and totally stress-reducing. Victoria Giardina Displaying Photos A small but impactful detail is that the Skylight looks clean and modern, so it doesn't make the kitchen feel like a tech showroom. It's just sleek enough to feel intentional and designed, but not cold or overly sterile. During the weekdays, my fiance and I lean hard into its meal planning features. We use the list function to track grocery items, and the meal prep section. It's like a cross between a Pinterest board and your mom's handwritten dinner list, if that makes sense. We also started using it to organize and share photos, something I thought I wouldn't care much about, but wow, it makes a difference. There's something surprisingly comforting about seeing random snapshots of our weekend hikes or goofy selfies from late-night pizza runs rotating throughout the day. We've even developed a little habit of adding a quick 'Good luck today, you've got this' note or a favorite photo of the two of us with a heart when one of us have a meeting or a stressful day ahead. Think of it as a sticky note lunchbox message, 2025 edition. Skylight allows users to upload photos via the app or email them directly to your Skylight address, and it's something genuinely satisfying about walking past it and catching a glimpse of your week, like a little window into the life you're building. Cost Here's a breakdown of the Skylight Calendar pricing, comparing the free basic experience versus the paid Plus (premium) plan: Basic (non‑premium) Skylight Calendar ( $320 $315) : With no subscription required, the Skylight Calendar includes calendar syncing (with Google, Outlook, Apple iCloud, Cozi, Yahoo, etc.), simple chore charts, lists (to-dos, grocery lists), and routine tracking. These foundational features let families manage schedules and share tasks without subscribing. : With no subscription required, the Skylight Calendar includes calendar syncing (with Google, Outlook, Apple iCloud, Cozi, Yahoo, etc.), simple chore charts, lists (to-dos, grocery lists), and routine tracking. These foundational features let families manage schedules and share tasks without subscribing. Plus Plan (premium) Skylight Calendar (additional $79 a year): This unlocks advanced capabilities, including Sidekick/Magic Import (AI‑powered email, screenshot, PDF parsing into calendar events and meal planning), chore rewards, photo/video screensaver mode and recipe/meal tools. Features such as rewards and Sidekick conversion tools require a subscription. Chore charts and basic lists remain free, but automatic imports and screensaver/photos features do not. Why Skylight Is Great for Professionals and Students Using the Skylight Calendar for work has completely leveled up how I organize my day; it's like having a personal assistant, but one that lives on my wall and doesn't need coffee breaks. Work meetings, deadlines, lunch breaks that I swear I'll take — it's all right there. I've synced every calendar I use (and trust me, there are a lot), and can update stuff from my phone on the fly, and it magically appears on the screen like I've got calendar superpowers. 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Google proposes to open Play Store to more real-money games in India
Google proposes to open Play Store to more real-money games in India

TechCrunch

time9 minutes ago

  • TechCrunch

Google proposes to open Play Store to more real-money games in India

Google has proposed sweeping changes to its Play Store and advertising policies in India, aiming to allow more real-money gaming apps onto its platforms in a bid to settle an ongoing antitrust case with a local online gaming platform WinZO. On Wednesday, India's competition watchdog issued a public notice (PDF) inviting comments on a 'commitment proposal' from Google, offering to expand access to its Play Store and advertising policy for more real-money gaming apps in the South Asian market. Google proposed to replace its current pilot program by allowing the distribution of all real-money games in the country, which are 'self-declared by developers as permissible online real-money games as per applicable laws/jurisprudence' on Google Play in the country. However the developers are also required to submit proof that an authoritative third-party body has declared the app to be a 'game of skill,' the company proposed. 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San Francisco | REGISTER NOW Alongside offering to expand its Play Store for all real-money games self-declared by developers, Google proposed to update its Developer Program Policies to reflect the update. The company also stated that it would finalize an 'appropriate business model' for real-money game developers. Similarly, Google has proposed to allow 'games of skill' to be advertised in India where the app maker provides proof by a third-party that it is a game of skill and not gambling. The recognized third parties in this case could even be industry associations such as the All India Gaming Federation, E-Gaming Federation, or the Federation of Indian Fantasy Sports. Google said it would begin allowing compliant real-money games on its Play Store in India within 120 days of the CCI's approval, while related ad policy changes would take effect within 150 days of the regulator's order. 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Big Tech to work with Trump administration to build digital health ecosystem
Big Tech to work with Trump administration to build digital health ecosystem

TechCrunch

time9 minutes ago

  • TechCrunch

Big Tech to work with Trump administration to build digital health ecosystem

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