Perplexity appears to be preparing a digest experience for its Computer agent, with recent builds showing a redesigned page that is currently empty but is wired to populate with daily updates pulled from a range of sources. The shell is in place ahead of the content, which suggests the feature is still being assembled rather than nearing a public switch-on.
Alongside the page is a fresh settings tab dedicated to the digest, letting users shape what they see and govern which connectors feed it. The roster spans everyday office tooling, such as email and cloud drives, through to developer-leaning services like Linear, GitHub, and Notion, a mix suggesting Perplexity wants the briefing to draw from both inbox chatter and active project work.
Memory looks set to play a central role. The company has been reworking its recall layer toward a knowledge-based structure reminiscent of the file-driven, categorized stores that always-on agents like OpenClaw and Hermes rely on, where separate documents hold distinct slices of context. Insights surfaced from that memory would be folded into each digest, giving the summary a personal cast rather than a generic news roll.
One capability tagged “coming soon” is the option to route the digest to Slack, an obvious draw for teams and anyone leaning on Perplexity at work, and a natural extension of Computer’s existing Slack presence, which already answers DMs and runs scheduled workflows.
No firm date has emerged, though the work has reached production testing, which usually means word lands within weeks. Because the digest leans on Perplexity Computer and its credit-metered compute, the likeliest home is the Max tier; Pro access feels less certain, given Computer’s wider rollout, but that remains speculation for now. Taken together, the moves push Computer further toward an ambient briefing layer that watches your tools, remembers your context, and reports back on a schedule.