AI tool comparison
Google AI Edge Gallery vs Perplexity Comet Browser
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Mobile
Google AI Edge Gallery
Gemma 4 on your phone, offline, with agentic skills — no cloud needed
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Google AI Edge Gallery is a mobile app that lets anyone run powerful open-source LLMs — primarily Gemma 4 — directly on their Android or iOS device with zero internet connectivity. The April 2026 update brought full Gemma 4 support including the E2B edge variant optimized for sub-1.5GB RAM, alongside new Agent Skills that enable multi-step autonomous workflows entirely on-device. The app goes well beyond a chat interface. Users get Thinking Mode to watch the model's reasoning process in real time, multimodal features for image analysis and voice transcription, a Prompt Lab for experimentation, and Tiny Garden — an interactive game driven purely by on-device natural language understanding. Hugging Face integration lets users import custom models beyond the curated defaults. The significance of the April 7 release is timing: it dropped the same day as LiteRT-LM and coincides with Gemma 4's general availability, creating a complete stack from framework to end-user app. With 899 GitHub stars gained in a single day and app store availability on both iOS and Android, Edge Gallery is becoming the reference showcase for what on-device AI looks like in 2026.
Productivity
Perplexity Comet Browser
A Chromium browser with an AI agent baked into every tab
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Comet is a standalone Chromium-based browser built by Perplexity that ships with a persistent AI sidebar agent. The agent can fill forms, summarize pages, conduct research, and execute multi-step web tasks without switching context. Early access is rolling out via waitlist to existing Perplexity users.
Reviewer scorecard
“The Agent Skills addition is the headline. Running multi-step agentic workflows on a phone with no API calls is something developers have been wanting to demo to clients. The Kotlin codebase is well-structured enough that it serves as a useful reference implementation too.”
“Even the E2B variant struggles on older devices and drains battery fast during extended sessions. The model roster is Gemma-heavy by design, which limits utility for developers invested in other model families. This is a showcase app more than a daily driver.”
“The direct competitor here is Arc Browser plus any AI extension, or just Chrome plus the Perplexity extension that already exists — and Perplexity already ships that extension. The specific scenario where this collapses is enterprise adoption: IT departments don't swap default browsers for waitlist products, and consumers don't either without a compelling reason beyond 'the sidebar is better.' The prediction: Google ships Gemini natively into Chrome at a depth Perplexity can't match within 18 months, and the browser angle becomes indefensible. For this to earn a ship, Comet needs a capability that is literally impossible to replicate in an extension — and form-filling and summarization are not that.”
“Putting agentic AI in every pocket without a subscription or data plan is a genuine democratization moment. As mobile silicon improves, Edge Gallery represents where all smartphone AI is heading — the privacy and latency benefits of on-device will eventually make cloud-dependent AI feel antiquated.”
“The thesis here is falsifiable: the browser is the last surface layer a model provider can own before cloud platforms commoditize the query layer, and whoever owns ambient web interaction owns the monetization stack that replaces the search ad. The dependency that has to hold is that users adopt a second browser for AI tasks — a behavior that has actually happened before with Arc, Brave, and Opera, so it's not implausible. The second-order effect nobody is talking about: if Comet's agent can observe full browsing context across sessions, Perplexity builds a behavioral dataset that no API-layer competitor can replicate, which is the real moat. The trend is browser-as-OS-layer, and Perplexity is early — not on-time, early — which means the execution risk is high but the position is genuinely differentiated.”
“Image analysis and voice transcription working fully offline is immediately useful on shoots or at events where connectivity is spotty. The Prompt Lab is a great scratchpad for refining prompts before committing them to a production pipeline.”
“The buyer here is unclear in a way that should worry everyone: consumers don't pay for browsers, and enterprise won't deploy an unapproved Chromium fork from a company best known for a search sidebar. The pricing architecture is almost certainly 'bundled into Perplexity Pro,' which means the browser is a retention mechanic, not a revenue line — that's fine until you realize the cost of maintaining a browser fork is not trivial and the ROI has to be measured in churn reduction, not new ARR. The moat question is the real problem: Chromium is open, the AI agent layer is replicable, and the switching cost for a browser is extremely high to create but fragile once created. This survives if Perplexity gets acquired by a platform player who needs an AI browser story; as a standalone business decision, the unit economics don't pencil.”
“The job-to-be-done is specific: execute multi-step web tasks without juggling tabs, extensions, and copy-paste loops — and that is a real job that knowledge workers hire for daily. The onboarding question is the one I can't answer from waitlist access, but the make-or-break moment is whether a user can complete a real task in the first five minutes without reading docs, because agentic products that require prompt engineering upfront die in onboarding. The completeness problem is that this requires switching your entire browser, which is a massive ask — Perplexity would have shipped a stronger product by nailing the extension first and using that install base as the migration funnel into Comet rather than leading with the browser. The specific product opinion I'd give them credit for: making the agent persistent and context-aware across the session, not just per-page, is the right call and meaningfully different from extension-based competitors.”
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