“45 minutes each way on the train, plus five hours of reading a week. Reads two pages, gets motion sick, stops. Podcasts are the only format that works in a moving vehicle.”
TurboCast turns lecture PDFs, research papers, and textbook chapters into AI-narrated podcast episodes in under two minutes. Upload a file, pick how you want it explained, and listen on AirPods during your commute. Free plan covers 3 conversions per day. Built for students who retain more by listening than re-reading.
Free plan: 3 conversions per day · no credit card required.
DF to Podcast for Students is a TurboCast workflow that takes any PDF — a chapter of Campbell Biology, a 40-page research paper, a set of lecture slides — and generates a listenable podcast episode that explains the content in plain English. Output has chapter markers, an executive summary, and voice narration that does not sound like a text-to-speech robot from 2015.
This is not a PDF-to-audiobook converter. Audiobook-style tools read the page word-for-word, which is useless for a textbook full of figures and equations. TurboCast reads the PDF, understands the structure, and rewrites it as a conversation — the same way a good professor would explain the chapter during office hours.
You get three things every time: an MP3 for any podcast app, a transcript with timestamps, and an AI-generated study sheet with chapter titles and key takeaways.
If none of these are you, this probably is not for you. Better to know up front than churn out in week two.
“45 minutes each way on the train, plus five hours of reading a week. Reads two pages, gets motion sick, stops. Podcasts are the only format that works in a moving vehicle.”
“Can read the same paragraph four times without absorbing it. Paradoxically retains dense audio content at 1.5x playback speed without issue — engaged enough to stay present.”
“Reads 200+ papers a thesis chapter. Lit review requires skimming 40 papers to find 10 worth reading closely. AI summaries at 2x make the first-pass filter tractable.”
Five steps. You do the first four. We do the fifth.
Drag and drop any PDF up to 100 MB on the free plan, 500 MB on Pro. Works with scanned PDFs too — we OCR in the background. Lecture slides, research papers, textbook chapters — all supported.
Four options: Teacher (patient, step-by-step), Summary (high-density briefing for exam review), Podcast (conversational, best for long commutes), and Debate (two hosts argue opposing positions — best for papers you need to critique).
3, 5, or 10 minutes. A 40-page textbook chapter usually works best at 10 minutes; a short paper at 5; a lecture handout at 3.
15 AI voices, each with a personality: Ryan is clear and neutral for dense material, Luna is energetic for lighter topics, Sophie is warm and professional as default. Try two voices for dialogue mode.
Click once. The audio is ready in 60-90 seconds for most PDFs. Close the tab if you want — we email you the link when it is done.
| # | Use case | Mode | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Pre-lecture prep: skim chapter before class | Summary | 5 min |
| 02 | Commute review during exam week | Teacher | 10 min |
| 03 | First-pass filter on 20+ papers for lit review | Summary | 3 min |
| 04 | Understanding a paper you need to critique in seminar | Debate | 10 min |
| 05 | Reviewing lecture slides when the prof talked too fast | Teacher | 5 min |
| 06 | Case law / long legal briefs (law students) | Podcast | 10 min |
| 07 | Reviewing meeting notes from lab group | Summary | 3 min |
Honest version. Ten dimensions. We tell you where NotebookLM wins, not just where we do.
Brand recognition, deeper Google integration, no-cost unlimited during current beta. If you are already in the Google ecosystem and only need occasional summaries, NotebookLM might be all you need. We do not think you should switch unless the thing NotebookLM cannot do is specifically the thing you need.
ADHD brains have a specific relationship with reading long text. It is not that the material is too hard. Sustaining visual attention on a static page for 45 minutes requires executive function bandwidth that is not available on demand. The same brain, given the same content in audio while walking or commuting, absorbs the material at 1.5x speed without strain.
We did not design this for ADHD. It happened to fit because behaviors that help ADHD studying — short segments, redundancy, pre-structured summaries — are behaviors that help any learner manage dense material. The ADHD community just notices it first and harder.
Narrative-heavy — TurboCast shines here.
Summary mode cuts 30 papers to 3 hours of audio.
AI describes equations in prose. Works for first pass.
Formula-heavy content struggles. Ask for conceptual focus.
No narrative to extract. Use the chapter around it instead.
Uploading the entire textbook, not a chapter.
→ Split the PDF by chapter first — most PDF viewers have this built in.
Using the default Sophie voice for 10-minute dense material.
→ Try Ryan (clear, neutral) for heavy material. Swap to Luna if attention drops.
Forgetting to export the transcript.
→ Export as PDF or DOCX and highlight while listening the second time.
Picking Summary when you meant Teacher.
→ First exposure to a topic → Teacher. Exam review → Summary.
Not using chapter markers.
→ Every output has timestamp chapter titles. Jump back to the section you zoned out on.
Not a PDF? Have a link, article URL, or audio file?
Open the full converter →