Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

AI browsers are coming for phones, but not from the big players

Add as a preferred source on Google
Representation of Comet browser on mobile phone.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Over the past few days, I’ve tested a new AI-first browser called Comet, developed by Perplexity. The browser is still in an invite-only stage, and preference is given to users with a Perplexity subscription. The company, however, already has grand plans for the mobile platform. 

Perplexity is already working on a mobile version of the Comet browser and talking with smartphone brands to pre-install it on their devices. In a conversation with The Verge, CEO Aravind Srinivas mentioned that a mobile version of the browser was in development and will co-exist alongside the Perplexity mobile app. 

What’s coming?

“Some people are going to use the standalone Comet app, just like how they use Chrome or Safari, and it’s okay,” Srinivas said on the Decoder podcast. He mentioned that users will be able to interact with any webpage using AI, and that voice-based interactions will be a part of the package. 

The Perplexity co-founder also revealed that the app will be available for both Android and iOS, mentioning Google’s Chromium and Apple’s WebKit foundations for web browsers. On the desktop version, Perplexity’s Comet browser is built atop the Chromium engine, which powers Chrome and Edge among other web browsers. 

Recommended Videos

But developing a web browser is only one part of the equation. Wrangling a share out of Chrome’s massive user base is an entirely different ballgame. And that’s where Perplexity is hoping some brand partnerships will yield positive results.

A big chess move

The company is planning to join hands with smartphone brands so that the Comet app will come pre-installed on their hardware. “It’s not easy to convince mobile OEMs to change the default browser to Comet from Chrome,” Srinivas told Reuters

Perplexity already has a similar deal in place with Motorola, which entails pre-installation of the Perplexity mobile app on smartphones. The AI company also created custom system-level optimizations that allow users to directly summon Perplexity using the Moto AI bundle, handle emails, control music playback, and make restaurant bookings. 

Srinivas admitted that the road ahead won’t be easy. Google already has deals in place with Android smartphone brands that involve pre-installation and the setting up of Chrome as the default browser out of the box. Some of these stipulations are under antitrust scrutiny.

The browser landscape, however, is shifting rapidly. Google has already integrated AI mode within Search to do essentially what Perplexity’s answering engine does. Additionally, my experiments with Dia and Opera browser tell me that browsers with AI agents, or AI-powered action skills, are the next big frontier.

In the meantime, OpenAI — the maker of ChatGPT and one of the biggest AI players in the world — is reportedly working on its web browser, as well. The company already has agentic products such as Operator and ChatGPT agent out there. Moreover, it also has a deal in place with Apple that deeply integrates ChatGPT capabilities with Siri and across the Apple Intelligence stack.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
Acti just turned your smartphone keyboard into an AI assistant
One keyboard that types your words and does your errands. This might be the upgrade your thumbs have been waiting for.
Acti keyboard open on iPhone

Your smartphone’s keyboard is the thing you interact with the most, and yet, it has largely remained the same since it was introduced two decades ago. Yes, it has become better at understanding our typing habits and predicting text, but its function has largely remained unchanged. 

A Singapore startup called Acti looked at the keyboard and the large space it occupies on your smartphone and asked a fair question. Why not make it actually do things? After seeing its keyboard in action, I think the idea has legs.

Read more
Finding photos is so much easier with Siri AI in iOS 27 that I no longer scroll
Natural language photo search in iOS 27 is the kind of feature that quietly becomes essential.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

My camera roll has crossed 8,000 photos, and it got there by capturing random moments (only to forget them later). The problem, however, starts when someone asks me to share something specific. It could be their portrait from last weekend or the food pictures they snapped using my phone.

Finding those pictures usually means scrolling through my seemingly endless camera roll. If the photo is a month or two old, I end up scrolling past hundreds of other images to find it, and that gets old fast.

Read more
WhatsApp clears that usernames won’t leave you open to scammers
New safeguards include username keys, rate limits, and anti-impersonation protections.
Whatsapp Usernames Whatsapp Username

WhatsApp's long-awaited username feature is now officially rolling out to users. But almost as soon as it was announced, many began asking an obvious question: won't this make it easier for scammers to message strangers? Now, WhatsApp has stepped in to explain why it believes that won't happen.

WhatsApp says usernames aren't as open as Telegram's

Read more