Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
Perplexity opens up its Personal Computer AI assistant to all Mac users
tech

Perplexity opens up its Personal Computer AI assistant to all Mac users

Engadget · May 7, 2026, 7:22 PM · Also reported by 3 other sources

Key takeaways

  • Perplexity Last month, Perplexity sought to better compete with the likes of Claude Cowork and get out ahead of Apple's delayed, generative AI-powered version of Siri by bringing Personal Computer to mac OS.
  • The company says everyone can download the new Perplexity mac OS app and use Personal Computer "for everyday queries, attachments and dictation." Usage is tied to Pro and Max plans' credit limits, Perplexity noted.
  • Personal Computer can run tasks across local files, other apps, the web and Perplexity's own servers, according to the company.

Perplexity Last month, Perplexity sought to better compete with the likes of Claude Cowork and get out ahead of Apple's delayed, generative AI-powered version of Siri by bringing Personal Computer to mac OS. The AI assistant was previously only available to those on Perplexity's $200 per month Max plan, but now the company has opened it up to all Mac users.

The company says everyone can download the new Perplexity mac OS app and use Personal Computer "for everyday queries, attachments and dictation." Usage is tied to Pro and Max plans' credit limits, Perplexity noted.

Personal Computer can run tasks across local files, other apps, the web and Perplexity's own servers, according to the company. It taps into a number of models to carry out specific tasks, such as Gemini for deep research, Nano Banana for images and ChatGPT "for long-context recall and wide search." Unlike with similar tools, Personal Computer will handle the bulk of the heavy lifting in the cloud as opposed to running entirely locally, in part to reduce strain on the Mac.

Article preview — originally published by Engadget. Full story at the source.
Read full story on Engadget → More top stories

Also covered by

Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from Engadget alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop