AI tool comparison
MiniAi vs Perplexity Comet
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Productivity
MiniAi
Select any text on Mac, press ⌥Space, get AI in a floating panel
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
MiniAi is a macOS menu bar app with exactly one job: explain selected text without breaking your focus. Highlight any text on your Mac — in a PDF, email, code file, web page, or document — press Option+Space, and a floating AI explanation panel appears. No app switching, no copy-paste, no context loss. Built by a medical student who needed to stay in reading flow while looking up terms in research papers, MiniAi uses Claude Haiku under the hood for fast, accurate explanations. The floating panel dismisses with Escape and leaves no trace in your task switcher. The scope is deliberately minimal: one gesture, one action, instant result. No chat history, no threads, no settings overwhelm. Free to use with your own Anthropic API key. Launched today on Product Hunt where it resonated strongly with students, researchers, and professionals who live in document-heavy workflows.
Productivity
Perplexity Comet
An AI-native browser that automates multi-step web tasks natively
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Perplexity Comet is an AI-native browser that embeds agentic automation directly into the browsing experience, letting users delegate multi-step tasks like form filling, research synthesis, and e-commerce workflows to an on-page agent. It enters open beta exclusively for Perplexity Pro subscribers. Rather than a browser extension layered on top of Chrome, Comet is a standalone browser built from the ground up around AI-first interaction patterns.
Reviewer scorecard
“The Option+Space shortcut is muscle memory within 10 minutes. BYOK with Haiku means it's essentially free at typical usage — Haiku is fast and accurate enough for term lookups and quick explanations. The zero-UI-overhead philosophy is exactly right for a tool you invoke 20 times a day.”
“The primitive is: a Chromium fork with an injected agent that can read and manipulate the DOM plus call Perplexity's inference API. The DX bet is that bundling the runtime into the browser eliminates the permission and injection problems that plague extension-based agents — that's actually the right call architecturally. But the moment of truth is trying to automate something that matters to you specifically, and without a published automation scripting interface, a local action log, or any developer surface to inspect what the agent is actually doing, this is a black box. The weekend alternative for a competent engineer is Playwright with a function-calling loop, which gives you full observability. Until Comet ships an agent trace viewer or a scripting API, it's a consumer demo, not infrastructure.”
“Apple's own Writing Tools in macOS 15 already has a 'Summarize' action in the right-click menu, and it's free with no API key. PopClip has been doing triggered text actions for a decade with a rich ecosystem of extensions. MiniAi needs a clearer differentiator beyond the keyboard shortcut.”
“The direct competitors here are Arc with Browse, Dia, and honestly just Operator from OpenAI — which already does agentic browser automation and has the distribution advantage of the most-used AI brand in the world. Comet's specific failure scenario: any workflow that requires logging into accounts with 2FA, handling CAPTCHAs, or navigating SPAs with dynamic state — which is most of the interesting automation targets. My 12-month prediction is that OpenAI or Google ships 80% of this natively into their existing browsers and Perplexity's differentiation collapses to 'we also have a search box.' To earn a ship, Comet needs to demonstrate agent reliability rates on real-world tasks above 80%, not cherry-picked demos.”
“Tools like MiniAi are training users to expect ambient AI assistance — intelligence available at any moment without mode-switching. This behavioral shift is significant: once people get used to instant contextual explanation, the bar for every reading and research tool permanently rises.”
“The thesis here is falsifiable: by 2028, the browser becomes the agent runtime rather than a document viewer, and the team that owns the browser layer owns the automation stack. The dependency is that OS-level agent APIs from Apple and Microsoft don't make the browser layer irrelevant before Comet builds distribution. The second-order effect nobody's talking about is that if this works, Perplexity gains clickstream data on user intent that no search engine currently has — not just queries but the full task graph, which is a training data moat. They're riding the trend of intent-layer consolidation and they're early enough that the category isn't defined yet, which is the right time to plant a flag.”
“The story behind MiniAi — built by a med student to stay in flow during paper reading — is authentic and the design reflects genuine user empathy. For writers, researchers, and anyone working with dense material, this is the kind of tool you install and forget you installed because it just works.”
“The buyer here is the Perplexity Pro subscriber who already trusts the brand with search — this is a land-and-expand move and the expand story is actually credible because browser replacement has natural stickiness once your bookmarks and session history are in. The pricing is smart: Comet ships included with Pro, which lowers the adoption friction to zero and lets Perplexity study task completion data before charging for the feature separately. The moat question is real though — the switching cost of a browser is high but Perplexity doesn't own an OS, a mobile platform, or an enterprise SSO, so enterprise expansion is a hard road. The business survives model commoditization because the value is in the task graph and user behavior data, not the inference itself.”
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