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AI Notes Summarizer

Instantly summarize long notes, lectures, and textbook content into concise, easy-to-review summaries.

5 of 5 free generations remaining

Example Outputs

Input:

Long biology lecture notes about photosynthesis covering light reactions, Calvin cycle, chloroplast structure, and energy conversion...

Output:

**Key Points: Photosynthesis** • **Definition**: Process converting light energy → chemical energy (glucose) • **Location**: Occurs in chloroplasts, specifically in thylakoid membranes and stroma **Two Main Stages:** 1. **Light Reactions** (Thylakoid membranes) - Capture light energy using chlorophyll - Split water molecules (H₂O → O₂ + H⁺) - Produce ATP and NADPH - Release oxygen as byproduct 2. **Calvin Cycle** (Stroma) - Uses ATP and NADPH from light reactions - Fixes CO₂ into organic molecules - Produces glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆) - Also called 'dark reactions' (doesn't need light directly) **Overall Equation:** 6CO₂ + 6H₂O + light energy → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂

Input:

History lecture about the causes of World War I including nationalism, imperialism, militarism, and alliance systems...

Output:

**Causes of World War I - Summary** **MAIN Causes (Acronym: MANIA)** • **M - Militarism**: Arms race between European powers, especially Germany vs Britain. Countries built massive armies and navies. • **A - Alliances**: Two major alliance systems created tensions: - Triple Alliance: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy - Triple Entente: France, Russia, Britain • **N - Nationalism**: Intense pride in one's nation led to competition and conflict. Slavic nationalism in Balkans was especially volatile. • **I - Imperialism**: European powers competed for colonies in Africa and Asia, creating rivalries. • **A - Assassination**: Archduke Franz Ferdinand killed in Sarajevo (June 28, 1914) - the spark that ignited the war. **Key Takeaway**: WWI resulted from long-term tensions, not a single event. The assassination was the trigger, but underlying causes had been building for decades.

How AI Notes Summarizer Works

1

Enter Input

Type your topic, paste your notes, or describe what you need.

2

AI Generates

Our AI processes your request and creates high-quality content.

3

Copy & Use

Review, edit, and use the generated content for your work.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I upload PDF files to summarize?

Yes! Our Notes Summarizer accepts PDF uploads up to 10MB. Simply click the attach button or drag and drop your PDF. The AI will extract the text and create a summary. This works great for textbook chapters, lecture slides, and research papers.

How long can my notes be?

You can paste up to 5,000 characters of text or upload PDFs up to 10MB. For very long documents, we recommend breaking them into sections for the best quality summaries.

What subjects does the summarizer work for?

Our AI works for any subject - science, history, literature, math concepts, business, law, medicine, and more. It's trained to identify key information regardless of the topic.

What's the difference between the summary formats?

Bullet Points: Quick, scannable list of key facts. Paragraph: Flowing text that connects ideas. Outline: Hierarchical structure with main topics and subtopics. Cornell Notes: Formatted with cues, notes, and summary sections for active studying.

Is this free to use?

Yes! You get 5 free summaries per day. No account needed - just paste your notes and generate. For unlimited summaries, check out our Pro plan.

How accurate are the summaries?

Our AI is designed to identify and preserve the most important information from your notes. However, we recommend reviewing summaries to ensure nothing critical was missed, especially for exam preparation.

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