Why the web as we know it may fade and what AI, personal agents, and data interfaces mean for publishers, SEO, and commerce.
Sometimes it's easy to take for granted how big the internet really is. What was described as simply a passing fad in 1995 ...
AI browser agents represent the next evolution of web browsing, moving from passive search to active assistants that can navigate sites, take actions and complete tasks ...
A new AI web browser seemingly pops up every day, but none I've used thus far is worth paying for now or in the foreseeable ...
The new browsers use cloud-based AI to deliver some useful features as a sort of digital assistant, but they have potential ...
Maybe it's time we rethink just how much we're depending on AI these days, before it blows up in our faces. Just saying!
There are a growing number of AI browsers available, so I tested four: Perplexity Comet, Opera Neon, ChatGPT Atlas, and Dai.
Mozilla Firefox is launching an AI Window to increase its market share in the highly cometitive browser market. The new ...
These browsers all promise to automate away the mundane aspects of navigating the internet, and there are moments—like when it deals with your grocery list—in which that seems pretty compelling. But ...
The privacy changes web browsers will be required to make under a new California law could set the de facto standard for the ...
Another thing you can do to surf the web quickly is to ditch the mouse (well, mostly) and rely on keyboard shortcuts instead.