OpenAI just flipped how ChatGPT begins your day. With the launch of ChatGPT Pulse, the app now crafts a tailored morning briefing running overnight that draws on chat history, memory, feedback, and even linked apps such as Gmail and Calendar. This new feature clears the fog of information overload. Each morning, Pulse presents a set of visual cards covering topics that matter to you: a suggested dinner based on your preferences, a follow-up idea from prior conversations, or reminders tied to your calendar. You can tap any card to dive deeper, ask ChatGPT for details, or save it as a chat thread.
Customization sits at the core of Pulse. Using a “curate” option, you control what topics surface. Thumbs up and thumbs down signals tweak future items. If you change your mind, you can review or delete feedback. To enrich recommendations, you may optionally link Gmail or Calendar. From there, the system might surface meeting ideas, upcoming appointments, or helpful suggestions tied to your schedule.
Because this feature requires substantial compute, OpenAI is rolling it out first to Pro users on mobile. Over time, the plan is to expand Pulse access to more users. Of course, privacy concerns hover in the background. Pulse only uses your connected data if you opt in. The team has built safety filters to block harmful content and ensures that your feedback adapts your feed without training models for others.
Pulse shifts ChatGPT from passive to proactive. It no longer waits for you to ask it does work for you. If this kind of morning briefing becomes precise and trusted, it could change how people consume information. Expect it to evolve fast.