Perplexity Computer: What the New AI Agent Really Does
Perplexity Computer: What the New AI Agent Really Does
Perplejidad
4 mar 2026

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Perplexity Computer is a cloud-based AI agent that takes a high-level goal, breaks it into tasks, and delegates them to specialised sub-agents using multiple models and app connectors. It’s designed to run complex workflows in the background — from research and analysis to document creation and follow-up — with enterprise controls layered on top.
For the last year, most AI tools have focused on one thing: answering questions better.
Perplexity’s new product, Computer, is a bet that the next frontier isn’t “better answers” — it’s execution. Instead of replying with text, Computer is designed to take an outcome you describe, turn it into a workflow, and then delegate tasks to sub-agents that do the work in the background.
That’s why the launch matters. It’s not just another chatbot feature. It’s a shift toward AI that behaves more like a digital worker: planning, coordinating, acting, and delivering outputs.
What is Perplexity Computer?
Perplexity describes Computer as an “independent digital worker” that goes beyond Q&A by taking action: synthesising information from the web and your organisation’s context via connectors, then executing multi-step workflows on your behalf.
In Perplexity’s Enterprise documentation, Computer is presented as a system that can create assets, manage emails, conduct research and more — running tasks “in the background” and supporting scheduled or condition-based triggers.
The key idea: orchestration, not one model
One of Computer’s defining characteristics is multi-model orchestration.
Reporting describes Computer as coordinating 19 different AI models to complete complex workflows. In practice, that means the system chooses which model is best for each subtask (research, coding, summarisation, generation) and stitches the results together.
This matters for teams because it’s a different model of value:
You’re not buying “the smartest model”.
You’re buying a system that can route work to the best tool for the job.
How it works?
Perplexity’s Enterprise guide lays out the core capabilities:
Asynchronous execution: It runs in the background, including scheduled jobs and proactive actions.
Parallel research: It can research multiple items simultaneously.
Sub-agents: Specialist agents handle distinct task types (research, analysis, monitoring) with handoffs.
Connectors: Integrations across common enterprise tools (email, GitHub, Slack, Notion, data platforms, CRM).
A secure sandbox: A cloud environment intended to protect data during execution.
The simplest way to think about it:
You describe an outcome. Computer plans the work. Sub-agents do the steps. You get a finished output.
Who is it for?
Computer isn’t aimed at casual users. It’s positioned for people who need high-leverage outcomes:
Executives who want a daily briefing built from trusted sources and internal context
Strategy and research teams doing competitive analysis
Ops teams generating reports, plans, comms and follow-ups
Engineers and analysts who want automated “research → build → document” flows
TechCrunch notes it’s available on Perplexity’s highest tier — Perplexity Max at $200/month — which reinforces that “premium productivity” positioning.
How this compares to other agent approaches
The market is full of “agent” claims. The difference is often governance.
Computer is cloud-based and positioned with enterprise controls, connectors and a sandbox. That’s an explicit contrast with DIY autonomous agent setups that run locally or require heavy configuration.
The trade-off: you get speed and convenience, but you also need to assess third-party risk and workflow governance.
What enterprises should evaluate before they adopt
If you’re considering Computer (or any agentic system), focus on what usually breaks in production.
1) Data boundaries and permissions
What data can the agent access through connectors?
How is access granted, revoked, and audited?
Can you enforce least privilege?
2) Logging, traceability and review
Can you see what the agent did, not just the final output?
Can you review sources and intermediate steps?
Can you replay or reproduce results?
3) Human-in-the-loop controls
Where does it require approval (sending emails, updating systems, deploying assets)?
Can you restrict actions to “draft only”?
4) Cost and unit economics
Agentic workflows can run long and call multiple models. Understand:
how credits are charged
how long-running workflows are governed
how you prevent “runaway” tasks
5) Portability and vendor resilience
If you build workflows inside one vendor’s orchestration layer, switching is painful.
The safest approach:
maintain a portable “AI profile” and prompt library
store evaluation tasks outside the platform
keep critical logic documented so you can rebuild it elsewhere
Why this launch matters for 2026
Computer is a signal of where the market is heading:
AI is moving from answers to actions
multi-model is becoming default
the UX and governance layer is where differentiation happens
In other words: models will keep improving, but the biggest productivity gains will come from systems that can execute work reliably inside real organisational constraints.
Next steps
If you want to explore agentic workflows without creating risk:
Choose one workflow with clear boundaries (e.g., weekly research briefing)
Limit connectors and permissions to the minimum
Require review before any external action (emails, updates)
Measure time saved and quality outcomes
Expand gradually, using governance patterns that scale
Generation Digital can help you evaluate agent platforms, define safe operating models, and design workflows that deliver value without creating compliance headaches.
FAQs
What is Perplexity Computer?
A cloud-based “digital worker” that takes a goal, breaks it into tasks, and runs multi-step workflows using sub-agents, connectors and multiple AI models.
How many models does Perplexity Computer use?
Reporting describes Computer as coordinating 19 different AI models for different tasks.
Who can access Computer today?
Coverage indicates it’s available to Perplexity Max subscribers ($200/month) and as “Computer for Enterprise” for Enterprise Max users.
Is Computer safe for enterprise use?
It’s positioned with enterprise connectors, controls and a secure sandbox, but buyers still need to assess permissions, logging, and governance.
What’s the best first workflow to try?
Start with bounded research and document creation (e.g., weekly competitor briefing) before allowing actions like sending emails or updating systems.
Perplexity Computer is a cloud-based AI agent that takes a high-level goal, breaks it into tasks, and delegates them to specialised sub-agents using multiple models and app connectors. It’s designed to run complex workflows in the background — from research and analysis to document creation and follow-up — with enterprise controls layered on top.
For the last year, most AI tools have focused on one thing: answering questions better.
Perplexity’s new product, Computer, is a bet that the next frontier isn’t “better answers” — it’s execution. Instead of replying with text, Computer is designed to take an outcome you describe, turn it into a workflow, and then delegate tasks to sub-agents that do the work in the background.
That’s why the launch matters. It’s not just another chatbot feature. It’s a shift toward AI that behaves more like a digital worker: planning, coordinating, acting, and delivering outputs.
What is Perplexity Computer?
Perplexity describes Computer as an “independent digital worker” that goes beyond Q&A by taking action: synthesising information from the web and your organisation’s context via connectors, then executing multi-step workflows on your behalf.
In Perplexity’s Enterprise documentation, Computer is presented as a system that can create assets, manage emails, conduct research and more — running tasks “in the background” and supporting scheduled or condition-based triggers.
The key idea: orchestration, not one model
One of Computer’s defining characteristics is multi-model orchestration.
Reporting describes Computer as coordinating 19 different AI models to complete complex workflows. In practice, that means the system chooses which model is best for each subtask (research, coding, summarisation, generation) and stitches the results together.
This matters for teams because it’s a different model of value:
You’re not buying “the smartest model”.
You’re buying a system that can route work to the best tool for the job.
How it works?
Perplexity’s Enterprise guide lays out the core capabilities:
Asynchronous execution: It runs in the background, including scheduled jobs and proactive actions.
Parallel research: It can research multiple items simultaneously.
Sub-agents: Specialist agents handle distinct task types (research, analysis, monitoring) with handoffs.
Connectors: Integrations across common enterprise tools (email, GitHub, Slack, Notion, data platforms, CRM).
A secure sandbox: A cloud environment intended to protect data during execution.
The simplest way to think about it:
You describe an outcome. Computer plans the work. Sub-agents do the steps. You get a finished output.
Who is it for?
Computer isn’t aimed at casual users. It’s positioned for people who need high-leverage outcomes:
Executives who want a daily briefing built from trusted sources and internal context
Strategy and research teams doing competitive analysis
Ops teams generating reports, plans, comms and follow-ups
Engineers and analysts who want automated “research → build → document” flows
TechCrunch notes it’s available on Perplexity’s highest tier — Perplexity Max at $200/month — which reinforces that “premium productivity” positioning.
How this compares to other agent approaches
The market is full of “agent” claims. The difference is often governance.
Computer is cloud-based and positioned with enterprise controls, connectors and a sandbox. That’s an explicit contrast with DIY autonomous agent setups that run locally or require heavy configuration.
The trade-off: you get speed and convenience, but you also need to assess third-party risk and workflow governance.
What enterprises should evaluate before they adopt
If you’re considering Computer (or any agentic system), focus on what usually breaks in production.
1) Data boundaries and permissions
What data can the agent access through connectors?
How is access granted, revoked, and audited?
Can you enforce least privilege?
2) Logging, traceability and review
Can you see what the agent did, not just the final output?
Can you review sources and intermediate steps?
Can you replay or reproduce results?
3) Human-in-the-loop controls
Where does it require approval (sending emails, updating systems, deploying assets)?
Can you restrict actions to “draft only”?
4) Cost and unit economics
Agentic workflows can run long and call multiple models. Understand:
how credits are charged
how long-running workflows are governed
how you prevent “runaway” tasks
5) Portability and vendor resilience
If you build workflows inside one vendor’s orchestration layer, switching is painful.
The safest approach:
maintain a portable “AI profile” and prompt library
store evaluation tasks outside the platform
keep critical logic documented so you can rebuild it elsewhere
Why this launch matters for 2026
Computer is a signal of where the market is heading:
AI is moving from answers to actions
multi-model is becoming default
the UX and governance layer is where differentiation happens
In other words: models will keep improving, but the biggest productivity gains will come from systems that can execute work reliably inside real organisational constraints.
Next steps
If you want to explore agentic workflows without creating risk:
Choose one workflow with clear boundaries (e.g., weekly research briefing)
Limit connectors and permissions to the minimum
Require review before any external action (emails, updates)
Measure time saved and quality outcomes
Expand gradually, using governance patterns that scale
Generation Digital can help you evaluate agent platforms, define safe operating models, and design workflows that deliver value without creating compliance headaches.
FAQs
What is Perplexity Computer?
A cloud-based “digital worker” that takes a goal, breaks it into tasks, and runs multi-step workflows using sub-agents, connectors and multiple AI models.
How many models does Perplexity Computer use?
Reporting describes Computer as coordinating 19 different AI models for different tasks.
Who can access Computer today?
Coverage indicates it’s available to Perplexity Max subscribers ($200/month) and as “Computer for Enterprise” for Enterprise Max users.
Is Computer safe for enterprise use?
It’s positioned with enterprise connectors, controls and a secure sandbox, but buyers still need to assess permissions, logging, and governance.
What’s the best first workflow to try?
Start with bounded research and document creation (e.g., weekly competitor briefing) before allowing actions like sending emails or updating systems.
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Generación
Digital

Oficina en Reino Unido
Generation Digital Ltd
33 Queen St,
Londres
EC4R 1AP
Reino Unido
Oficina en Canadá
Generation Digital Americas Inc
181 Bay St., Suite 1800
Toronto, ON, M5J 2T9
Canadá
Oficina en EE. UU.
Generation Digital Américas Inc
77 Sands St,
Brooklyn, NY 11201,
Estados Unidos
Oficina de la UE
Software Generación Digital
Edificio Elgee
Dundalk
A91 X2R3
Irlanda
Oficina en Medio Oriente
6994 Alsharq 3890,
An Narjis,
Riad 13343,
Arabia Saudita








