​​Is ChatGPT Atlas Really That Bad to Use?​

A few days ago, my social media feed was flooded with posts about OpenAI’s new browser, Atlas. The media was touting it as the “third browser war” and “Chrome’s killer,” making it seem like the internet was about to be turned upside down. I eagerly downloaded it to try it out, but the result was… well, let’s just say after one day of use, I obediently went back to Chrome (if you want AI, you can integrate MCP). I want to talk about how difficult this highly-hyped Atlas really is to use.

​​Smart Shopping? It Doesn’t Even Understand What I Need​​

Atlas’s flagship “Agent Mode” sounds impressive, right? It should make shopping easy. The actual experience? It’s downright laughable. I tried this feature on Amazon. Based on my browsing history, it confidently recommended three items: a notebook I had already bought and used up, a deodorant I had just restocked, and a vacuum cleaner I had previously considered but found too expensive. I don’t need any of these things! Even funnier, it took a full ten minutes to pick these items. If I really relied on it for shopping, I’d probably end up with junk delivered to my doorstep. This isn’t artificial intelligence; it’s artificial stupidity.

​​Auto-Posting? The Content is Awkward and Requires Manual

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