
OpenAI introduced ChatGPT Pulse, a proactive experience that compiles personalized, research-backed updates each morning. In preview on mobile and limited to $200/month Pro subscribers, Pulse surfaces topical cards built from a user’s chats, explicit feedback, and opt-in connected apps (e.g., calendar/email), shifting ChatGPT from a request-driven tool to a context-aware assistant.
What Pulse Actually Does Under the Hood
Each day, Pulse performs background research anchored to user signals: recent conversations, long-term interests, thumbs-up/down feedback, and data from connected apps where enabled. The output appears as scannable visual cards (briefs and deep links) rather than an infinite feed, designed for quick triage and drill-down. Early examples include targeted news roundups and context-conditioned suggestions (e.g., travel planning aligned with calendar events).
Data Sources and Controls
Integrations are off by default and can be toggled. When granted, Pulse may use Gmail/Google Calendar context to tailor cards (e.g., meeting prep, itinerary nudges). OpenAI positions this as a user-level personalization layer; reporting notes emphasize optionality and in-app settings for managing connected accounts and memory.
Availability and Rollout Plan
Pulse is rolling out now to Pro on the ChatGPT mobile app as a dedicated tab. OpenAI says it wants broader availability “soon,” with Plus access targeted after product and efficiency improvements. The company reiterated the Pro-first gating due to compute costs.
Product Positioning: Toward Agentic, Goal-Oriented Workflows
OpenAI frames Pulse as the first step toward agent-like behavior where the model tracks goals and initiates updates without prompts. External coverage highlights the shift from chat to assistant workflows that reason over user state and schedule. This aligns with OpenAI’s recent emphasis on agents and proactive help, not passive Q&A.
The Signal from Leadership
Sam Altman summarized the intent succinctly: Pulse is his “favorite feature” to date, starting with Pro. His post also underscores the model’s use of interests and recent chats, hinting at broader personalization as users share preferences over time. OpenAI’s official announcement on X mirrors the blog language around daily, proactive updates.
Competitive Context
Pulse lands in a crowded “morning brief” space but differs by tying briefs to your live context and chats rather than generic headlines. It also inches ChatGPT toward hands-on assistant territory seen in agent platforms that watch calendars, draft emails, and pre-stage tasks—yet packaged for consumers inside the ChatGPT app rather than a separate agent runner.
Summary
Pulse formalizes ChatGPT as a proactive system: it reads your signals, checks your day, and delivers a compact, personalized brief—first for Pro on mobile, with Plus on the roadmap once the system is optimized. The implementation details (APIs, enterprise knobs, retention policies) will determine how far it goes beyond morning cards into full agent workflows.