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When I spoke with Perplexity to request access to Comet, a member of the company’s PR told me it would take a week or so to have my first “wow moment” with the web browser. After playing ...
Comet also comes with an AI assistant built in, similar to the Gemini integration that Google is testing in Chrome. Selecting the Assistant button in the top-right corner of the browser will open ...
Comet is based on Chromium, the open-source software engine that underpins Chrome. That means Perplexity’s browser supports Chrome extensions and allows users to bring over their bookmarks.
But Comet is still in beta and will likely mature. OpenAI has teased a possible web browser of its own (the latest speculation is it’ll be called “Aura” and arrive this summer), and is ...
When I recently tried out Arc’s sister browser Dia, which also leans heavily into AI, I wasn’t that tempted to switch. But Comet is different.
Perplexity’s new AI browser, Comet, is now live. Here’s how it fits into the company’s long-term vision for search and task automation.
Comet joins other AI browsers aiming to beat Chrome and other popular platforms. Though AI companies are betting on their browser's enticing users, their mainstream appeal is uncertain.
Perplexity begins Windows beta testing for its AI-powered browser Comet, offering smarter search and assistant features. iOS and Android versions are on the way.
Comet is a new AI browser from Perplexity that tries to reduce tab overload by turning browsing into a more conversational experience. It's starting to roll out now to Max users on an invite basis.
Credit: Image is from court documents Perplexity AI has been hit with a trademark complaint over its new AI-powered browser "Comet," a name that New York-based Comet ML says it has used since 2017.