Steven Johnson is a very meta author. He writes frequently about science and technology, and likes to immerse himself in the things he’s covering, even using them to change the way he writes books. A couple of years ago, a few months before ChatGPT launched and the AI boom took over the tech world, Johnson got a magazine assignment that sent him really, really deep down the AI rabbit hole. And he never came back up.
- Home
- Technology
- News
The chatbot becomes the teacher
The author Steven Johnson joins The Vergecast to talk about NotebookLM, AI-powered research tools, the new Audio Overviews feature, and much more.


Now, in addition to writing books, Johnson is also working at Google. He’s part of the team building a product called NotebookLM — “Notebook,” as the team calls it. It’s a note-taking and research tool: you upload documents and import web links, and Notebook’s Gemini-powered AI helps you organize things, extract information, and understand a subject better. “They reached out,” Johnson says when I ask how he got involved with Google, “and said, ‘hey, you’ve been dreaming of this ideal software tool that helps you organize your thoughts and helps you write and helps you formulate connections and brainstorm. We think we can do it now.” Johnson signed up, and has been at Google since the summer of 2022.
The product itself first launched in 2023 as Project Tailwind, and has since been rebranded and expanded in big ways. Just last week, the team launched Audio Overviews, which generates a podcast — with two chatty hosts, plenty of back and forth, and a truly remarkable penchant for the phrases “deep dive” and “buckle up” — based on the information you provide. It’s fascinating, it’s complicated, and it’s getting better really fast.
On this episode of The Vergecast, Johnson joins to discuss his fascination with AI, his time at Google, and the present and future of NotebookLM. We talk about the complicated issues raised by a tool like this, and whether it’s okay to let an AI do your research and homework.
We also talk about how to make sure a tool like NotebookLM is both accurate and easily fact-checked, why context windows are more important to the future of AI than most people realize, and how often AI podcast hosts should say “like” in conversation. And we talk about Johnson’s own process as a writer and creator, and how AI is changing the way he works.
If you want to know more on everything we discuss in this episode, here are some links to get you started:
FIFA hails 5M WC ticket requests amid backlash
- an hour ago
Australia plans tougher gun laws after police say father and son killed 15 at Bondi Beach
- 9 hours ago

Disney wants to drag you into the slop
- 2 hours ago

IHC summons Registrar Karachi University in Justice Jahangiri’s degree case
- 10 hours ago
Police recover gold from accused's husband in Dr Warda murder case
- 8 hours ago
Sindh govt announces release of film ‘Mera Layari’ in Jan 2026
- 10 hours ago

Chatbots are struggling with suicide hotline numbers
- 2 hours ago

Remember Google Stadia? Steam finally made its gamepad worth rescuing
- 2 hours ago

Control’s action-RPG sequel launches in 2026
- 2 hours ago
Messi mania peaks in India’s pollution-hit capital
- 10 hours ago
Seven khwarij killed, soldier martyred in DI Khan counter-insurgency operation: ISPR
- 13 hours ago
Govt slashes diesel price by Rs14 per litre
- 3 hours ago







