The third demo is where it gets exciting. The video will show Dia itself browsing into Amazon and putting things into the cart, with another example showing that the AI arc browser can analyze a table full of details of members who are shooting their video and then email each member separately.
Josh Miller,
the CEO of The Browser Company demonstrated some prototype feature that may or may not make it onto the final version. He showed a tool in the video that would help one write the next sentence or, even when one has to write about, say, how the iPhone launched, can pull information from the vast Internet. The feature can also read your open Amazon links and insert them in the email with a barebone description.
Now scheduled to be released sometime in 2025, the company did say Dia will become a smart web browser and that the future of AI will not be a button. Or an app. It will be built entirely at the browser layer or a new computing environment.
Dia is powered by command execution whereby the user can type commands in the address bar to show a document based on the description, send emails on your behalf and schedule meetings and add it to the calendar in natural language.