Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

ChatGPT just dipped its toes into the world of AI agents

Add as a preferred source on Google
OpenAI's ChatGPT blog post is open on a computer monitor, taken from a high angle.
Photo by Alan Truly / Digital Trends

OpenAI appears to be just throwing spaghetti at this point, hoping it sticks to a profitable idea. The company announced on Tuesday that it is rolling out a new feature called ChatGPT Tasks to subscribers of its paid tier that will allow users to set individual and recurring reminders through the ChatGPT interface.

Tasks does exactly what it sounds like it does: It allows you to ask ChatGPT to do a specific action at some point in the future. That could be assembling a weekly news brief every Friday afternoon, telling you what the weather will be like in New York City tomorrow morning at 9 a.m., or reminding you to renew your passport before January 20. ChatGPT will also send a push notification with relevant details. To use it, you’ll need to select “4o with scheduled tasks” from the model picker menu, then tell the AI what you want it to do and when.

Recommended Videos

The new feature will begin rolling out in beta to Plus, Team, and Pro users over the next few days. You’ll be able to set up to 10 separate tasks on desktop, web, and mobile during the beta phase, though the tasks manager menu will only be available through the web interface. The AI will be able to push reminder notifications through the macOS desktop app, your browser, or the iOS and Android mobile apps. The idea behind Tasks seems to be nearly identical to what the myriad native and third-party reminder apps on the market already do, just through a different brand’s interface.

Tasks looks to be OpenAI’s initial foray into AI agents, specialized models designed to take independent action while automating repetitive daily tasks. It’s a field that is expected to grow massively in 2025. Anthropic’s Claude already unveiled its Computer Use API in November, as did Microsoft with its Copilot Actions. Google is reportedly working on an agent of its own, code-named Project Jarvis, and announced earlier this week that its automotive agent will power the next generation of Mercedes-Benz MBUX navigation and entertainment systems.

Andrew Tarantola
Former Computing Writer
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
Apple could go back to Intel for chips, but not how you would expect (or dread)
Apple MacBook

Apple and Intel are reportedly exploring a manufacturing partnership that could reshape how future Apple chips are produced. But despite the headline, this does not mean Apple is abandoning Apple Silicon or returning to Intel-powered Macs.

According to a new Wall Street Journal report, Apple and Intel have reached a preliminary agreement for Intel to manufacture some chips designed by Apple. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman later clarified on X that there is still no finalized production agreement in place and discussions remain at an early stage. His post also noted that Apple continues to have concerns about Intel’s manufacturing technology and long-term competitiveness.

Read more
Apple wants you to verify your identity before you get Education discount on products
Apple moving the US Education Store off the honor system also seems about making a globally consistent verification infrastructure that could eventually support more aggressive Education Store expansion.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Getting an Apple Education discount in the United States used to be as simple as claiming you’re a student or a teacher; it didn’t need a formal verification. That era is officially over. 

Starting May 8, 2026, Apple now requires formal identity verification for all Education Store purchases in the US, ending the informal honor system that was in place for years (via MacRumors). 

Read more
OpenAI’s Codex just moved into Chrome, where the useful work and the risks live
The new extension lets Codex move beyond coding and handle real browser tasks across signed-in sites
Page, Text, File

OpenAI is giving Codex a larger stage than the coding window. Its new Chrome extension lets the agent use an authenticated web session, so it can help with work that already lives inside Gmail, Salesforce, LinkedIn, dashboards, and internal apps.

That pushes Codex out of the developer sandbox and into the web apps where daily work already happens. With Chrome access, it can step into research, CRM updates, dashboard checks, and browser-based debugging, which is where plenty of work gets stuck across tabs.

Read more