The generative artificial intelligence search startup Perplexity AI Inc., which rivals both Google LLC and OpenAI, says it’s working on its own, AI-powered web browser. The company revealed the ...
The company behind Perplexity AI has announced plans to unleash a browser specifically for agentic search. Perplexity AI is an AI-powered search engine and research tool that combines the massive ...
Perplexity has officially launched its AI web browser, Comet, for all to use. Credit: May James/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images Perplexity has officially launched its Comet AI web browser to ...
Your browser just became smarter than your coworker who claims to know everything about productivity apps. Perplexity launched Comet on July 9th, 2025-an AI-powered ...
Google has integrated Gemini 3 into Chrome with agentic capabilities, joining OpenAI and Anthropic in the race to automate ...
However, I found myself opening a separate browser to find the answers I was looking for on Google. ChatGPT Search hasn't quite nailed down keyword searching, but it worked well for open-ended prompts ...
Back in 2008, Google launched the Chrome browser to help better integrate its industry-leading search engine into the web-browsing experience. Today, OpenAI announced the Atlas browser that it hopes ...
SAN FRANCISCO — ChatGPT-maker OpenAI on Tuesday announced an "Atlas" search browser, leveraging its artificial intelligence prowess in a direct challenge to Google Chrome. "This is an AI-powered web ...
Editor’s Note: Norton said on Tuesday, Dec. 2, that the Norton Neo browser is available to download and try without a waitlist. The original story, published May 22, 2025, continues. For years, the ...
The features rolling out include making Google’s AI image generator and editing tool, Nano Banana, available to Chrome’s ...
I normally don’t do standalone software and app reviews here. I tend to focus on those in my hardware reviews. But I discovered two apps that have improved my life immensely, Kagi Search and Zen ...
In the beginning—well in 1993, to be specific—there was Mosaic. And it was good, or at least good enough. By 1995, however, Mosaic’s time was on the wane and Netscape was people’s browser of choice.