What stands out to me is that AI browsers change the unit of value from “page view” to “completed task.” If the assistant can read, compare, summarize, and act across pages, the old web model starts to feel very fragile.
I think the same shift is coming for chat products. The next messaging app will probably not be judged only by encryption or group chats, but by whether it becomes a place where discovery, private communication, AI help, and transactions all connect. That is why I am watching XChat closely, especially if X keeps pushing toward an everything-app model.
What stands out to me is that AI browsers change the unit of value from “page view” to “completed task.” If the assistant can read, compare, summarize, and act across pages, the old web model starts to feel very fragile.
I think the same shift is coming for chat products. The next messaging app will probably not be judged only by encryption or group chats, but by whether it becomes a place where discovery, private communication, AI help, and transactions all connect. That is why I am watching XChat closely, especially if X keeps pushing toward an everything-app model.
Notes I am keeping on what XChat is and what it could become: https://wexchat.pro/en/what-is-xchat
Which browser are you using now?
I’m going back and forth between Arc, Dia, Comet, Vivaldi, Safari and Firefox.
I'm giving Dia a test now, and will try the others. Thanks for the good info!