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

Meta brings Manus AI agent to your Windows PC and Mac for automating tasks

My Computer is an AI agent that can sort files, run apps, and send emails for you

Add as a preferred source on Google
manus-ai-my-computer-agent
Manus AI Manus AI

Meta’s recently acquired AI startup Manus has launched a desktop app for Mac and Windows. It brings an agentic tool called My Computer, where you can type what you want and have it carry out tasks across files, tools, and apps on your PC.

Today, we’re taking Manus out of the cloud and putting it on your desktop.

Introducing My Computer, the core feature of the new Manus Desktop app. It’s your AI agent, now on your local machine. pic.twitter.com/OaWU4imk3Q

— Manus (@ManusAI) March 16, 2026

How Manus’s My Computer automates your everyday tasks

When you open the app, it looks like a chatbot interface with a prompt box and options to attach files or folders. You can drop a folder and ask it to organize everything for you.

The agent scans your files, understands what is inside them, and then acts on your system using command line instructions. That is how it creates folders, moves files, and organizes everything automatically.

Recommended Videos

In one example shown by Manus, a florist uploads thousands of unsorted photos and asks the AI to sort them into categories like bouquets, bridal flowers, and decorations. The AI scans the files, understands what each image shows, and sorts them into organized folders within minutes.

You can also connect Google apps and ask it to take actions across services. For example, the AI agent can fetch a file from your desktop and email it to someone while you are away.

My Computer can also build apps or use your local GPU to run automated tasks. However, every action needs your approval, so you stay in control of what Manus can access.

Where Manus stands next to OpenClaw and Perplexity’s Personal Computer

When Meta acquired Manus last December, it worked only on the cloud. Now it runs directly on your computer where your work happens. The free plan gives limited access, while paid plans start at $20 a month or $17 annually.

However, Manus AI is entering a space that is already heating up thanks to OpenClaw. Both AI agents can now run directly on your computer instead of the cloud.

OpenClaw (formerly known as Clawdbot or Moltbot) is free and open-source, which gained rapid attention and sparked wider interest in agentic AI. Although experts warn that such tools can raise privacy and security concerns.

Manus, on the other hand, is a paid service and is being positioned as a more polished product under Meta. Perplexity is pushing a similar idea with its Personal Computer agent, which can handle entire workflows if you let AI take over everyday tasks across your system.

All of this leaves you with a clear choice. Do you go with a free, open setup that gives you more control, or a paid tool that is easier to use but comes with trade-offs?

Which one works for you depends on how much control you want and how much you are willing to trust an AI with your system.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
Sony shows off AI-touched Xperia 1 VIII camera samples. It’s an epic self-own that I can’t digest
Sony built the Xperia 1 series for people who know what a histogram looks like. Xperia Intelligence appears to have been built for everyone else, and the sample images make that tension impossible to ignore.
Sony aggressive AI photography featured.

Sony has a camera legacy that most brands, regardless of whether they make cameras or smartphones, dream of. The company rewrote what full-frame sensors could do with its Alpha series. 

That particular rendering of skin tones, that restraint with saturation, the commitment to accurate white balance; the company’s color science is precisely why cinematographers, videographers, and photographers like me, in the consumer tech space, swear by its color science and camera hardware. 

Read more
Razer’s new Blade 18 gets Arrow Lake refresh and a modest $3,999.99 starting price
For $3,999.99, you get the base model with Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti. A 5090 variant is available, too.
Razer Blade 18.

Razer has officially unveiled the 2026 Blade 18 today, and at the heart of all three configurations is an Intel Arrow Lake processor. 

I’m talking about the Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus, which features 24 cores, up to 5.5GHz clock speed (with boost), 36MB cache, and an onboard NPU that delivers up to 13 TOPS of compute power. 

Read more
Windows 11 will clean up its own driver mess so you don’t have to
Say goodbye to the nightmare of hunting down broken drivers after a bad Windows update.
Surface laptop on wooden table

It seems that Microsoft is keeping up its promise of making Windows 11 better. After introducing a new low-latency mode that speeds up app launches and an update that fixes the RAM memory leak issue, the tech giant is testing a new feature that addresses one of its most prominent problems. 

The new feature is called Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, and it can automatically roll back a broken driver that was pushed to your PC through Windows Update. 

Read more