
7 Future Advancements That Will Make AI PCs Smarter Than Ever
Although AI is already using deep learning, AI neural networks offer much more than just automation. In the near future, these machines will better optimize user behavior, use autonomous security systems, and change the approach to how we interact with the devices.
Talking further, let's talk about the seven major advancements in AI-driven PCs that will redefine intelligence, making PCs smarter than ever.
One of the biggest advancements to expect from AI PCs is the evolving role of dedicated Neural Processing Units (NPUs). All the AI PCs, whether it's an intelligent laptop or a smart AI computer, come with special chips that accelerate various machine learning and deep learning tasks. Recognize that everything is real-time without depending on the cloud.
Perform on-device language translation.
Focus more on context-aware computing to better identify user preferences.
Low latency for AI-based decisions.
Apart from this, future NPUs will use a greater quantity of TOPS (Tera Operations per second), which means all the tasks will be achieved with enhanced efficiency.
Large language models like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity AI currently run on the cloud. But as AI PCs evolve further, these will run directly on the device. Although it might take time, experts are trying to develop miniature large language models that run directly on AI PCs. As data will run locally, this means fewer chances of a privacy breach and information.
You can expect offline functionality for tasks such as coding, summarizing, and more.
Office response time will increase more, with zero lag in apps and games.
Right now, your PC can follow voice commands, but it often makes mistakes. This is about to change. New advancements will help AI PCs understand human speech much better. Catch every word you say, even if you talk fast.
Learn your voice tone and speaking style.
They will handle many languages and accents without stopping.
AI PCs will no longer ask you to repeat what you said. They will listen carefully and respond the right way. This means easier typing, faster search results, and smoother talks with your PC.
AI PCs will soon get much better at seeing and understanding the world. Smart cameras and sensors will bring a new level of thinking. Your PC will read your face and mood.
It will adjust the screen brightness based on your room.
It will block the screen when a stranger looks over your shoulder.
With these features, your AI PC will not just look at things. It will make decisions based on what it sees. That means more privacy, more safety, and better comfort every time you sit in front of the screen.
Speed matters to everyone. Whether you are opening a game or doing a project, AI PCs will soon be faster and smarter without getting hot or tired. They will manage the battery better.
They will open apps and files in the blink of an eye.
They will close apps you do not need to save energy.
You will not hear fans blowing or see the battery drop too fast. Your AI PC will keep calm and stay quick. That is good for the planet, too, because saving power means saving energy
Soon, AI PCs will be aware of their environment and act smartly. This means they will not just work on your desk. They will connect with everything around them. Sense the sound and light in your room.
Adjust volume or lighting as needed.
Sync with smart gadgets like lights or fans.
Your AI PC will become part of your home or classroom. It will behave based on where it is and what is happening. This makes it feel like your room itself is smarter.
AI PCs are changing quickly and for the better. They are learning more, becoming faster, and even understanding feelings. They are turning into intelligent helpers who know what we need before we even ask. Every change we saw today is real and coming soon. Your next AI PC will not just sit on your desk. It will be a thinking, talking, protecting, learning friend.
TIME BUSINESS NEWS

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
Elon Musk threatens Apple with legal action, reignites OpenAI feud over alleged antitrust violations
Elon Musk threatened Apple with a lawsuit – and launched a testy back-and-forth on X with OpenAI's Sam Altman as he accused the App Store of violating antitrust laws by unfairly favoring ChatGPT over Musk's Grok chatbot. 'Apple is behaving in a manner that makes it impossible for any AI company besides OpenAI to reach #1 in the App Store, which is an unequivocal antitrust violation. xAI will take immediate legal action,' Musk wrote in a post on his social media platform X Monday. He added that X and his Grok AI chatbot are excluded from the App Store's 'Must Have' list when the apps rank as #1 in news and #5 overall, respectively – asking if Apple is 'playing politics.' 3 Elon Musk threatened Apple with legal action as he accused its App Store of antitrust violations. Getty Images Apple did not immediately respond to The Post's request for comment. In response to Musk's accusations, Altman wrote in a post: 'This is a remarkable claim given what I have heard alleged that Elon does to manipulate X to benefit himself and his own companies and harm his competitors and people he doesn't like.' The war of words quickly devolved into mudslinging over follower counts. 'You got 3M views on your bulls— post, you liar, far more than I've received on many of mine, despite me having 50 times your follower count!' Musk wrote late on Monday. Altman said a 'skill issue' or 'bots' were to blame for Musk receiving fewer views on some of his posts. 'Will you sign an affidavit that you have never directed changes to the X algorithm in a way that has hurt your competitors or helped your own companies?' Altman pressed, adding that he would 'apologize if so.' Musk posted about an hour later: 'Scam Altman lies as easily as he breathes.' Last year, Apple partnered with OpenAI to integrate ChatGPT into its iPhone, iPad, Mac laptop and desktop products. At the time, Musk warned that 'if Apple integrates OpenAI at the OS level, then Apple devices will be banned at my companies. That is an unacceptable security violation.' It's just the latest in a yearslong feud between Musk and OpenAI, which the billionaire parted ways with in 2018 after co-founding the AI firm in 2015. 3 Elon Musk questioned why X and his Grok AI chatbot are excluded from the App Store's 'Must Have' list. Apple In February 2024, Musk filed a lawsuit against OpenAI and Altman, accusing them of betraying the firm's nonprofit mission by partnering with Microsoft. He withdrew the suit in June but refiled it two months later. Prior to the verbal sparring session, Musk had cheered Grok's performance on the App Store – rising past Google as the fifth top free app. 3 OpenAI chief Sam Altman pressed Elon Musk to sign an affidavit in the pair's latest verbal spat. AP xAI released its latest chatbot version, Grok 4, last month, while OpenAI unveiled GPT-5 on Thursday. Musk's legal threats come soon after Robert Keele, who led the legal department at xAI, announced he left the company to spend time with his family – though he added there was 'daylight between our worldviews' with Musk. OpenAI and xAI did not immediately respond to The Post's requests for comment. Apple is currently facing a landmark lawsuit from the Department of Justice that alleges the company maintains an illegal monopoly over smartphones. And in June, Apple lost a plea to halt changes to its App Store from a ruling that the company could no longer charge a commission on payment links inside its apps.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
AI Startup Perplexity Bids $34.5 Billion to Acquire Google Chrome
Artificial intelligence startup company Perplexity AI has offered to purchase Google web browser Google Chrome for $34.5 billion. The bid came after the U.S. Department of Justice advised Google to sell off its internet browser as part of the antitrust lawsuit it lost last year, which found the company of having a monopoly on internet search. As first reported by The Wall Street Journal and later confirmed by other outlets including CNBC, several investors, including large venture capital funds, have stepped in to back Perplexity's bid for Google Chrome, which has an estimated value of between $20 billion and $50 billion. Perplexity's value is $16.5 billion shy of the money its offering to put up for Chrome. More from TheWrap AI Startup Perplexity Bids $34.5 Billion to Acquire Google Chrome Trump Says Intel CEO 'Must Resign, Immediately' Over Alleged China Ties Apple to Invest Additional $100 Billion in US Production Amazon Surges to $168 Billion in 2nd Quarter Sales as CEO Andy Jassy Says AI 'Will Change Every Customer Experience' Perplexity's bid is the latest in Google's legal battle with the DOJ, which sued the tech giant in October 2020 over alleged antitrust violations, claiming it held a monopoly over fair competition in the search and advertising markets. In November 2024, after finding that Google did in fact break antitrust laws in an effort to maintain a monopoly on web searches that same year, the DOJ pushed for a federal judge to dismantle Google to boost competition. 'The playing field is not level because of Google's conduct, and Google's quality reflects the ill-gotten gains of an advantage illegally acquired,' DOJ lawyers wrote in a filing with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. 'The remedy must close this gap and deprive Google of these advantages.' The DOJ tasked Judge Amit Mehta, who sided with the department in August 2024, with prohibiting Google from making deals with Apple and Samsung. Google, the department claimed, pays Apple $20 billion per year to be the default search engine on iPhones. In April 2025, a U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema found that Google again violated antitrust law by maintaining a monopoly over online advertising technology that 'substantially harmed' its customers and stifled competition. The DOJ, over the course of a three-week trial, has 'proven that Google has willfully engaged in a series of anticompetitive acts to acquire and maintain monopoly power in the publisher ad server and ad exchange markets for open-web display advertising,' the ruling read. Judge Mehta, according to WSJ, may decide this month on how competition should be restored, which could involve forcing Google to sell Chrome — and that's where Perplexity comes in. The WSJ report said that Perplexity wrote a letter to Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai with an offer to buy Chrome, framing the plan as one 'designed to satisfy an antitrust remedy in highest public interest by placing Chrome with a capable, independent operator.'The post AI Startup Perplexity Bids $34.5 Billion to Acquire Google Chrome appeared first on TheWrap. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Perplexity's $34.5 billion gambit for Google's Chrome could change the AI wars overnight
Perplexity, an emerging force in artificial intelligence, has offered a staggering $34.5 billion for Google's Chrome browser, according to the Wall Street Journal. The unsolicited bid, which Perplexity confirmed to the newspaper, is far in excess of Perplexity's own $18 billion valuation and comes at a pivotal moment for both companies: Perplexity recently unveiled its own AI-native search browser, called Comet, last month, an explicit move to take on Google Chrome. Meanwhile, Google's own fate is up in the air as a federal judge weighs what remedies should follow from the 2024 ruling that Google had illegally monopolized the search market. Perplexity said in a statement to the Journal that its bid is 'designed to satisfy an antitrust remedy in highest public interest by placing Chrome with a capable, independent operator.' The Justice Department's antitrust case against Google, which began in 2020, accused the company of unlawfully suppressing competition by locking in default search deals with device manufacturers and browser developers. Last year, U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google had, in fact, monopolized the search market through anticompetitive tactics. Among the most consequential is exactly what Perplexity is proposing: whether Google should be compelled to divest Chrome, a browser installed on billions of devices and accounting for well over 60% of global browser usage. Chrome, of course, is more than just a web browser; it's a strategic linchpin connecting users to Google Search and a treasure trove of data fueling Google's $2 trillion advertising apparatus. Chrome's size—about 3.5 billion users—positions it at the fulcrum of both user data collection and default search engine placement. The sale of Chrome is one of the Department of Justice's top recommendations as a Google remedy. For what it's worth, DuckDuckGo CEO Gabriel Weinberg recently testified in court that Chrome could be worth upwards of $50 billion; some analysts offer more conservative estimates for its valuation, around $20 billion. Perplexity's bid, at $34.5 billion, lands squarely within that range. Perplexity's rationale Perplexity, which has evolved from a little-known startup in 2022 to a high-profile competitor with an $18 billion valuation, now hosts about 30 million monthly active users and generates roughly $150 million in annual revenue. Its core product—a real-time AI-powered search engine with source citations—is positioned as a challenger to traditional search engines and leading AI assistants such as OpenAI's ChatGPT and Anthropic's Claude. Perplexity has partnered with several publishers, including Time, the Los Angeles Times, and, full disclosure, Fortune. Perplexity allows you to choose from many of those popular models, including GPT-5, Gemini 2.5 Pro from Google, and Claude Sonnet 4.0, which has attracted major investors including Nvidia, SoftBank, and Jeff Bezos. Perplexity has also been a prime acquisition candidate, with industry analysts suggesting Apple should buy Perplexity to strengthen its currently lagging AI portfolio and rely less on Google for search. And, of course, Perplexity already has its own AI web browser. Comet is capable of summarizing web pages, intelligently managing tabs, answering questions about on-page content, and automating tasks like calendar scheduling and online shopping. Comet's hybrid AI architecture combines localized processing for privacy-sensitive operations and cloud-based models—such as GPT-4o, Claude 3.5, and Perplexity's own algorithms—for more complex queries and agentic functions. Perplexity's CEO Aravind Srinivas described Comet on LinkedIn as a 'cognitive operating system.' In its letter to Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, Perplexity said its offer was designed to serve 'the highest public interest' by placing Chrome in 'capable, independent' hands. The company vows to maintain Chromium, the open-source foundation of Chrome and many other browsers, and also promises to keep Google as the default search engine within Chrome, though it would allow users to easily switch. This latter point may prove crucial as the DOJ contemplates how it will conclude its probe into Google's monopolistic practices. For what it's worth, Google has previously been opposed to any forced sale of Chrome. CEO Sundar Pichai has testified that divestiture would harm Google's ability to innovate, threaten user privacy and cybersecurity, and damage complementary services. The company has proposed narrower remedies—chiefly, modifying or ending exclusive agreements with Apple, Mozilla, and Android—to allow greater competition without a selloff. Perplexity and Google did not immediately respond to Fortune's request for comment. For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. This story was originally featured on Se produjo un error al recuperar la información Inicia sesión para acceder a tu portafolio Se produjo un error al recuperar la información Se produjo un error al recuperar la información Se produjo un error al recuperar la información Se produjo un error al recuperar la información