Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas, who once offered $34.5 billion for Google Chrome, now defaults Google search on his company’s Comet iOS browser. He acknowledges Google’s superiority for everyday navigational queries, while Comet aims to enhance answer quality and multimodal capabilities. This pragmatic approach positions Comet as a complementary tool, not a direct competitor, to Google. Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas, who once offered $34.5 billion for Google Chrome, now defaults Google search on his company’s Comet iOS browser. He acknowledges Google’s superiority for everyday navigational queries, while Comet aims to enhance answer quality and multimodal capabilities. This pragmatic approach positions Comet as a complementary tool, not a direct competitor, to Google.
Trending
- West Bengal elections 2026: How the state voted in 2021 — the year BJP surged
- For the first time ever, FBI confirms buying data to track people; What Director said
- Energy markets explode: Crude hits $114, gas jumps 35% after Iran targets Gulf fuel sites
- World Happiness Report 2026: Finland and Afghanistan maintain top and bottom positions respectively; India improves ranking – check full list
- JD(U) MLA Anant Singh freed in Yadav death case; DGP cites cardiac failure
- Happy Eid-ul-Fitr: 50 heartfelt wishes, messages, and quotes for your loved ones
- ‘Uncontrollable consequences’: Iran hits Gulf energy sites after Israel targets key gas field
- ‘Like replacing Virat Kohli’: Riyan Parag on Sanju Samson’s Rajasthan Royals exit
