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“The LookNote Guide” does not refer to a widely known mainstream product, book, or software feature under that exact name. However, depending on the context of your query, you might be thinking of one of several highly popular productivity, note-taking, or data analysis tools: 1. The Google NotebookLM “Source / Notebook Guide”

If you are looking for an AI research assistant, you are likely thinking of Google NotebookLM.

What it is: Within the app, the Notebook Guide (sometimes called the Source Guide) automatically populates as soon as you upload documents, PDFs, or links.

Key Features: It instantly generates high-level summaries of your materials, creates suggested follow-up questions, and acts as a directory to help you generate FAQs, study guides, timelines, or briefing docs. 2. LookNote (The Lightweight Markdown App)

There is a niche developer tool called LookNote, built on GitHub’s Electron framework.

What it is: A cross-platform, minimalist text editor and note-taking application.

Key Features: It features built-in text analysis. Users can highlight specific words or phrases within their notes and press an “Analyze” button to instantly fetch real-time data, definitions, and graphs from Wolfram-Alpha. 3. Google Looker Studio Guides

If your focus is on data visualization, business intelligence, or SEO tracking, you might be looking for a guide on Google Looker Studio (formerly Data Studio).

What it is: A platform used to turn raw data into interactive, highly visual dashboards and charts.

Key Features: Comprehensive guides in this space teach users how to build scorecards, pivot tables, line charts, and heat maps to track business metrics. 4. The Sketchnote Handbook

If you are looking for a physical guide on how to take highly visual, beautiful, handwritten notes, you might be misremembering the title of The Sketchnote Handbook by Mike Rohde.

What it is: A famous, fully illustrated beginner’s guide to “visual note-taking”.

Key Features: It teaches non-artists how to use simple shapes, icons, banners, and typography to map out thoughts during meetings or lectures.

Could you share a bit more about where you heard the term or what task you are trying to accomplish (e.g., summarizing research, designing a dashboard, sketching notes)? I can then point you to the exact guide or tool you need! Tutorial – Google Notebook LM

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