With Atlas, ChatGPT can come with you anywhere across the web—helping you in the window right where you are, understanding what you’re trying to do, and completing tasks for you, all without copying and pasting or leaving the page.
It’s a bit more limited than I initially expected, but I’m really curious to see how far it will go from here. I currently work with four monitors in my office , one of them is always running ChatGPT. If ChatGPT Atlas continues to evolve, I could honestly see myself getting down to just three. 😄 The potential here feels huge, and I’m excited to see how it grows.
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The friction of switching browsers is too high. Hope that OpenAI has made it simple for us to just login and sync our data.
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I came into Atlas seriously hyped after hands‑on time with @Dia Browser and @Perplexity 's Comet. And yes—Atlas clearly “gets” multi‑step tasks. You can feel the maturity of an agent that’s spent time manipulating real browsers from inside containers.
But it also feels like a browser that doesn’t understand the basics of being a browser:
- Extensions: You can install them, but they’re invisible in the UI. That makes simple stuff—like logging in with a password manager—basically impossible. In 2025. Awkward.
- Import: No Chrome, no Comet, no Dia. It’s Safari or nothing. That’s a head‑scratch when you’re courting power users with established stacks.
It reads like a move to reduce server bills by offloading more work into a local browser… while overlooking the core ergonomics that make a browser your daily home.
Net: impressive agentic brains, missing everyday browser bones. If Atlas is going to be the place I live on the web, it needs to respect the muscle memory and essentials of modern browsing—starting with visible extensions and sane imports.
I was using Comet from @Perplexity for a while, but I ultimately just went back to Chrome. It never really handled tasks fast enough or to a level of quality that I wanted. Maybe I'll end up giving this one a go though.
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Love it! I used to keep a tab pinned with ChatGPT always open anyways and this makes it so much easier, plus the load time seems to be faster with the built in browser vs using on Chrome. And the ability to read and interact with any open site directly on the screen is great
Replies
Olly - AI Agent for Social Media
Is this better than perplexity comet?
It’s a bit more limited than I initially expected, but I’m really curious to see how far it will go from here. I currently work with four monitors in my office , one of them is always running ChatGPT. If ChatGPT Atlas continues to evolve, I could honestly see myself getting down to just three. 😄 The potential here feels huge, and I’m excited to see how it grows.
The friction of switching browsers is too high. Hope that OpenAI has made it simple for us to just login and sync our data.
I came into Atlas seriously hyped after hands‑on time with @Dia Browser and @Perplexity 's Comet. And yes—Atlas clearly “gets” multi‑step tasks. You can feel the maturity of an agent that’s spent time manipulating real browsers from inside containers.
But it also feels like a browser that doesn’t understand the basics of being a browser:
- Extensions: You can install them, but they’re invisible in the UI. That makes simple stuff—like logging in with a password manager—basically impossible. In 2025. Awkward.
- Import: No Chrome, no Comet, no Dia. It’s Safari or nothing. That’s a head‑scratch when you’re courting power users with established stacks.
It reads like a move to reduce server bills by offloading more work into a local browser… while overlooking the core ergonomics that make a browser your daily home.
Net: impressive agentic brains, missing everyday browser bones. If Atlas is going to be the place I live on the web, it needs to respect the muscle memory and essentials of modern browsing—starting with visible extensions and sane imports.
Product Hunt
I was using Comet from @Perplexity for a while, but I ultimately just went back to Chrome. It never really handled tasks fast enough or to a level of quality that I wanted. Maybe I'll end up giving this one a go though.
Love it! I used to keep a tab pinned with ChatGPT always open anyways and this makes it so much easier, plus the load time seems to be faster with the built in browser vs using on Chrome. And the ability to read and interact with any open site directly on the screen is great
SpeakingAI
When I click "Visit", the website doesn’t open.