By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept

GadgetBond

  • Latest
  • How-to
  • Tech
    • AI
    • Amazon
    • Apple
    • CES
    • Computing
    • Creators
    • Google
    • Meta
    • Microsoft
    • Mobile
    • Samsung
    • Security
    • Xbox
  • Transportation
    • Audi
    • BMW
    • Cadillac
    • E-Bike
    • Ferrari
    • Ford
    • Honda Prelude
    • Lamborghini
    • McLaren W1
    • Mercedes
    • Porsche
    • Rivian
    • Tesla
  • Culture
    • Apple TV
    • Disney
    • Gaming
    • Hulu
    • Marvel
    • HBO Max
    • Netflix
    • Paramount
    • SHOWTIME
    • Star Wars
    • Streaming
Add GadgetBond as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google.
Font ResizerAa
GadgetBondGadgetBond
  • Latest
  • Tech
  • AI
  • Deals
  • How-to
  • Apps
  • Mobile
  • Gaming
  • Streaming
  • Transportation
Search
  • Latest
  • Deals
  • How-to
  • Tech
    • Amazon
    • Apple
    • CES
    • Computing
    • Creators
    • Google
    • Meta
    • Microsoft
    • Mobile
    • Samsung
    • Security
    • Xbox
  • AI
    • Anthropic
    • ChatGPT
    • ChatGPT Atlas
    • Gemini AI (formerly Bard)
    • Google DeepMind
    • Grok AI
    • Meta AI
    • Microsoft Copilot
    • OpenAI
    • Perplexity
    • xAI
  • Transportation
    • Audi
    • BMW
    • Cadillac
    • E-Bike
    • Ferrari
    • Ford
    • Honda Prelude
    • Lamborghini
    • McLaren W1
    • Mercedes
    • Porsche
    • Rivian
    • Tesla
  • Culture
    • Apple TV
    • Disney
    • Gaming
    • Hulu
    • Marvel
    • HBO Max
    • Netflix
    • Paramount
    • SHOWTIME
    • Star Wars
    • Streaming
Follow US
AIAppsHow-toOpenAITech

What is ChatGPT Pulse and why it works while you sleep

Instead of asking questions, ChatGPT Pulse shows up with answers you didn’t know you needed yet.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
Follow:
- Editor-in-Chief
Jan 18, 2026, 6:30 AM EST
Share
We may get a commission from retail offers. Learn more
OpenAI ChatGPT Pulse
Image: OpenAI
SHARE

ChatGPT Pulse is essentially ChatGPT on autopilot: instead of waiting for you to ask something, it quietly works in the background once a day, learns what you care about from your past chats and settings, then drops a personalized briefing into your account the next morning as a set of swipeable visual cards. Think of it as a daily AI digest that remembers your projects, hobbies, and upcoming plans, and nudges you with useful ideas and links before you even think to ask.​

At its core, Pulse is a proactive layer on top of regular ChatGPT. Normally, you open the app, type a question, and get an answer; with Pulse, the flow is flipped. Each night, the system does asynchronous research on your behalf, using your chat history, saved memories, and feedback signals to decide what might actually help you tomorrow, then packages that into short cards you can skim at a glance or expand into full conversations. For example, if you’ve been talking about learning Python, planning a trip to Japan, and trying to eat healthier, your morning Pulse might surface a couple of quick practice exercises, a visa or transit reminder, and a few dinner ideas tailored to your schedule and preferences.​

Right now, Pulse is a Pro-only feature and lives on the web, iOS, and Android apps, not the desktop apps, and it relies heavily on ChatGPT’s Memory system being turned on. Memory here is the long-term layer that stores things you’ve explicitly saved or that the model has inferred over time—your preferences, ongoing projects, favorite topics—so Pulse can use that context to decide what’s relevant without you having to restate it every day. If Memory is off, Pulse can’t really personalize anything meaningful, which is why OpenAI requires it for this feature, but still lets you switch both Memory and Pulse off at any time from settings if you’re not comfortable.​

The “cards” are where the experience feels different from a standard chat log. Each morning, Pulse refreshes with a small set of visual summaries: compact tiles you can scan in seconds, each focused on one idea—maybe a new article to read, a project next step, a set of to‑dos, or a quick explanation of something you’ve been wrestling with. Tap a card and it opens up into more detail, where you can ask follow‑up questions, ask it to rewrite or expand something, or save that card as a full chat thread so you can return to it later. Anything you don’t save or interact with disappears after a day, so Pulse behaves more like a rolling brief than a permanent inbox.​

What shows up in those cards isn’t random. Behind the scenes, Pulse pulls from several different signals: your explicit memories and saved facts, the topics you’ve been chatting about, how you interact with previous cards (thumbs up, thumbs down, opening or ignoring), your “Curate” feedback (where you tell it what you want more or less of), optional connected apps, and a layer of current news and trends that line up with your interests. The idea is to strike a balance between “this is clearly about me” and “this is something I might not have discovered on my own but is still relevant,” rather than just spamming you with generic tech headlines or random lifestyle tips.​

The Curate feature is where you can push Pulse in a more intentional direction. Inside Pulse, you can tap Curate and literally tell it what you want tomorrow’s research to focus on—anything from “find local free events this weekend that are rain‑or‑shine” to “pull five new research papers on LLM evaluation benchmarks” or “give me a weekly training progression for my half‑marathon in April.” If you share that request before around 10 pm local time, OpenAI aims to include it in the next morning’s Pulse, though they’re upfront that timing can vary. Over time, your curate prompts plus your feedback history become another strong signal that shapes what Pulse prioritizes and what it quietly drops.​

Crucially, Pulse also gives you a fair amount of control. You can give quick thumbs up or down on individual cards, open the three‑dot menu to leave detailed feedback, or report anything that looks off or potentially harmful under OpenAI’s Terms of Use. There’s a dedicated feedback history section where you can review and delete the input you’ve given Pulse if it no longer reflects what you care about, which matters because those signals are part of how it personalizes your daily brief. And if the whole thing becomes distracting, you can hide Pulse from the main chat view while still leaving it accessible from the sidebar, or turn off its use of memories in proactive suggestions entirely.

Where things get more interesting is when you connect external apps. Pulse is being built to work with connectors, starting with Gmail and Google Calendar, which are opt‑in and off by default. When you toggle on “Allow proactive activity” for those apps, Pulse can scan relevant emails and calendar entries in the background to surface genuinely useful suggestions—like restaurant ideas near the hotel for an upcoming work trip, reminders to prepare for a recurring weekly meeting, or a quick draft agenda for a call you have later in the day. OpenAI says content from Gmail and Calendar used this way won’t be used to train the model, and you can disconnect those integrations at any point.​

If you zoom out, Pulse is part of a broader shift from reactive chatbots to proactive AI agents. Instead of being a fancy search box, ChatGPT becomes a kind of ambient executive assistant: it remembers that you’re job hunting, studying for an exam, managing a side hustle, or trying to get in shape, and then uses the quiet hours of the night to line up ideas, resources, and reminders so you wake up with a head start. For busy people, that could look like a curated morning brief across work, personal life, and learning—one place where industry news, project nudges, travel details, and personal goals are stitched together by an AI that actually knows your context.​

There are trade‑offs and open questions, of course. A system that proactively reads your chats, optionally dips into your email and calendar, and then proposes actions raises the usual privacy and autonomy concerns, even if the knobs to turn things off are clearly there. At an industry level, though, Pulse is widely framed as a glimpse of where assistants are heading: not just answering your questions, but deciding which questions are worth asking you in the first place, and doing that in a way that feels helpful rather than intrusive.​


Discover more from GadgetBond

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Topic:ChatGPT
Leave a Comment

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Most Popular

DJI’s FC200 and T200 drones push industrial delivery and agriculture into the 200kg era

DJI Osmo Mobile 8P debuts with detachable remote and smarter tracking

ChatGPT for Clinicians is now free for verified US doctors

OpenAI Privacy Filter brings open-weight PII redaction to everyone

Opera GX Playground bundles panic button, Fake My History and Grass Touching Corner

Also Read
Stylish living room featuring the Amazon Ember Artline lifestyle TV mounted above a white marble fireplace. The TV displays a framed landscape artwork of rolling green hills with orange flowers under a blue sky, blending in like wall art. The room includes a mustard yellow sofa with decorative pillows, wooden lounge chairs, warm wall sconces, books, and modern decor, creating a cozy upscale interior design.

Amazon Ember Artline is now available in the US, starting at $899

Screenshot of the Google Admin console showing the data import tool dashboard. The page headline reads “Copy your data seamlessly using the data import tool,” with sections highlighting cloud-native infrastructure, accelerated parallel data import, and comprehensive tracking and resolution. Below, a “Data import batches” table lists import jobs for departments like finance, marketing, legal, and HR, showing Exchange Online as the data type, running status, and success rates between 97% and 99%.

Google Workspace now has a free built-in data migration tool for enterprises

Screenshot of Google Drive with the “Ask Gemini” panel open. The interface shows options to ask questions about files with actions like “Get prepared,” “Find insights,” and “Make progress.” A sidebar labeled “Your sources” allows users to add files for deeper insights, while the main prompt box at the bottom lets users ask Gemini questions directly within Google Drive.

Google’s Ask Gemini in Drive is now out of beta and available to everyone

Screenshot of a Google Sheets spreadsheet titled “Customer Feedback” for Dallas AC Tech & Repair. The table includes columns for Customer Name, Customer Message, Praise or Complaint, and Suggested Response. Rows show customer feedback entries with Gemini-generated classifications and professional response drafts, demonstrating AI-assisted spreadsheet filling and customer service workflow management.

Google Sheets’ new Fill with Gemini feature fills your data nine times faster

Green Google Sheets document icon centered on a light gray background, showing a simple white spreadsheet grid symbol on the front of the file.

You can now paste unformatted text and let Gemini build a Sheets table for you

Green Google Sheets document icon centered on a light gray background, showing a simple white spreadsheet grid symbol on the front of the file.

Building complicated spreadsheets in Google Sheets is now Gemini’s job

Illustration showing Google Workspace apps feeding into a central “Workspace Intelligence” system. Icons for Gmail, Chat, Docs, Meet, Slides, Sheets, Drive, Calendar, Keep, and Google Vids on the left connect through colored lines into the text “Workspace Intelligence” in the center, which then branches out into structured colorful blocks on the right, representing organized AI-powered workflow and data integration.

Workspace Intelligence gives Gemini a unified understanding of your work

Tesla Cybercab Robotaxi

Elon Musk confirms Cybercab production has started

Company Info
  • Homepage
  • Support my work
  • Latest stories
  • Company updates
  • GDB Recommends
  • Daily newsletters
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Write for us
  • Editorial guidelines
Legal
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • DMCA
  • Disclaimer
  • Accessibility Policy
  • Security Policy
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
Socials
Follow US

Disclosure: We love the products we feature and hope you’ll love them too. If you purchase through a link on our site, we may receive compensation at no additional cost to you. Read our ethics statement. Please note that pricing and availability are subject to change.

Copyright © 2026 GadgetBond. All Rights Reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information.