Perplexity’s autonomous AI agent, Computer, is finally landing on Android, turning your phone into a portable control center for long-running AI tasks instead of just a place to fire off quick prompts. After debuting on desktop and then iOS, the rollout to Android means the “start anywhere, continue anywhere” pitch now actually covers where most of the world’s smartphone users are.
If you haven’t been following along, Computer is Perplexity’s agentic layer that can spin up and manage complex workflows: think deep research, spreadsheet generation, API-based automations, and multi-step projects that run in the background while you get on with your day. Under the hood, it orchestrates multiple AI models rather than relying on a single brain, handing off different parts of the job to whichever model is best suited for that specific task. The result is less “chatbot that answers a question” and more “AI operator” that can keep working even when you close the tab or lock your screen.
On mobile, the big deal isn’t just that Computer exists in the Perplexity app, but that your state now follows you across devices in a way that feels more like a synced operating system than a cloud account. You can kick off a workflow on your desktop—say, a competitor analysis, a dense research brief, or a spreadsheet of leads—then step out with just your Android phone and still monitor progress, refine instructions, or kill the run if it goes off track. Community users who’ve tried it on mobile are already calling out cross-device state sync as the true game-changer, because you’re no longer punished for switching from laptop to phone mid-task.
This also slots into Perplexity’s broader footprint: the same app that handles your day-to-day AI search and quick Q&A now doubles as a console for these heavier Computer workflows. The Android app already supports things like Pro Search, thread follow-ups, voice input, and synced history across platforms, so Computer essentially rides on top of an existing, fairly mature mobile experience rather than being a separate, barebones client. That matters because you can move fluidly between “ask a quick thing” and “spin up a serious background job” without changing tools or context.
For Android specifically, this move is also a pure scale play: roughly 70 percent of global smartphone users are on Android, and early reactions from the community have immediately called out how big that expansion is. It takes Computer from being a nice extra for Apple-heavy and desktop-first users to something that a far larger slice of the market can actually build workflows around. And with deeper integrations already starting to appear on the Samsung side—where Perplexity’s tech is wired into system apps and browser-level agentic browsing—Android stops being “just another client” and starts to look like one of the default homes for this kind of AI assistant.
Practically, what this unlocks is a different kind of mobile usage pattern: instead of using AI on your phone only for quick replies or tiny summaries, you can now treat it as the remote control for substantial, hours-long workloads that execute elsewhere. You might describe a project while commuting, let Computer grind through the research and file generation, and then sit down at a desktop later to polish and ship the output—all without ever having to manually copy links or re-state context. It’s the same story across solo creators, small teams, and power users: less friction, more continuity, and a sense that your AI stack actually lives across your entire device setup, not just in a single browser tab.
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