#browser-competition

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fromTechRepublic
1 week ago

The Wait Is Over: Chromebooks Finally Get Gemini in Chrome

Chrome leads the market today, but Google is still under pressure to defend that position as the browser landscape shifts. New AI-focused browsers like Comet are raising the stakes for what users expect from a browser. Google responded to the competition with Gemini in Chrome. Launched in September 2025, it first rolled out for Android, Mac, and Windows users. Combining Chrome's superiority and Gemini's advanced intelligence, Google offered Chrome users a different kind of AI browser.
Artificial intelligence
#ai-browser
fromForbes
3 months ago
Artificial intelligence

Google's Quiet Victory: Why The AI Browser Wars Were Over Before They Began

fromTechCrunch
4 months ago
Tech industry

Perplexity's Comet AI browser now free; Max users get new 'background assistant' | TechCrunch

fromForbes
3 months ago
Artificial intelligence

Google's Quiet Victory: Why The AI Browser Wars Were Over Before They Began

fromTechCrunch
4 months ago
Tech industry

Perplexity's Comet AI browser now free; Max users get new 'background assistant' | TechCrunch

#openai
Gadgets
fromInc
3 months ago

Move Over Chrome: OpenAI Launches Atlas Browser

OpenAI launched Atlas, a web browser intended to compete with Google Chrome and capture search traffic and advertising revenue.
Gadgets
fromThe Verge
4 months ago

Opera launches its AI browser, but you'll have to pay to try it

Opera is launching Neon, an AI browser with task-specific agents, charging $19.90/month with limited early access and a waitlist.
Artificial intelligence
fromFortune
4 months ago

Microsoft boss says its new AI-infused web browsing experience is like 'a little angel on your shoulder doing the boring hard work' | Fortune

Microsoft turned Edge into an AI personal assistant, Copilot Mode, that controls browsing tasks, performs real-time actions, and keeps user oversight optional.
fromThe Verge
6 months ago

Where are the iPhone's WebKit-less browsers?

According to the Open Web Advocacy (OWA), Apple continues to place technical and financial restrictions on WebKit-alternative iOS browser engines that effectively stifle competition.
Privacy professionals
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