The new Perplexity Mac app touts an “all-new native Mac experience” that powers Perplexity’s Personal Computer agentic feature, according to a Perplexity blog post. And as of this week, the company ...
Perplexity today launched a new Mac app with support for its hybrid local-cloud AI agent Personal Computer, plus it expanded Personal Computer access to Pro and Enterprise users, so it is no longer ...
Perplexity’s Personal Computer, its answer to OpenClaw and other local AI agents, is now available to all Mac users via its desktop app, the company announced on Thursday. As a reminder, Personal ...
Perplexity has now announced that its Personal Computer experience is now available to all Mac users, following an initial rollout to early access testers. This launch by the company marks for a ...
The new app touts an “all-new native Mac experience” that powers Perplexity’s Personal Computer agentic feature. It launches with a slick intro video that explains how Personal Computer works on the ...
Perplexity has debuted a new agentic AI software called "Personal Computer" on the Apple Mac platform, which delivers an agent that can access files, apps, and more to accomplish work for users.
Perplexity is expanding access to Personal Computer through the new Perplexity app for macOS, making it available to all Pro, Max, and Enterprise users. Personal Computer is an advanced version of ...
Last month, Perplexity announced Personal Computer, a Mac-native platform built to primarily run on a Mac mini (though it can run on any Mac) and serve as the user’s personal agentic assistant running ...
Perplexity today launched Personal Computer, an expansion of Perplexity Computer that integrates with local files and apps on a Mac. Personal Computer was announced in March and was available on a ...
After a slow roll-out Perplexity's Personal Computer feature is more widely available to let users make a persistent agent that can access files, apps, and tasks across a user's Mac. The release ...
I wasn’t fully sure what to call this blog post, but I caught myself doing a few things on my iPad Pro today that I hadn’t previously mentioned on MacStories, and they seemed worthy of a mention here.