OpenAI Brings ChatGPT’s Advanced Voice Mode to Your Browser

OpenAI Brings ChatGPT’s Advanced Voice Mode to Your Browser

OpenAI this week continued its rollout of ChatGPT’s Advanced Voice Mode by adding support for web browsers.

Previously, the feature was only available on the desktop and mobile apps. “You can now talk to ChatGPT right from your browser,” Kevin Weil, OpenAI’s CPO, tweeted alongside a short video showing Advanced Voice Mode responding to an inquiry about Greek mythology.

To start, web access is limited to paid users with a Plus, Enterprise, Teams, or Edu account. “We’ll look to roll to free users in the coming weeks,” Weil says.

Voice mode on the web uses OpenAI’s ChatGPT-4o model, so it should work the same as it does on the mobile and desktop apps, providing a natural-sounding back-and-forth with the AI.

After a delay, OpenAI started a small Advanced Voice Mode rollout in July before a larger release to Plus and Team users in September.

Recommended by Our Editors

This comes after OpenAI launched an official Windows ChatGPT app last week, which lets you open a “companion window” on your PC and easily use the AI chatbot alongside any other Windows programs. An update to the ChatGPT app for macOS also added the ability to read computer code from third-party apps.

OpenAI is also rumored to be working on allowing ChatGPT to see what you’re doing on your device and use that information to take action. Per TechRadar, this Operator Agent is the next great race between OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic and may change how people interact with AI on their computers.

Get Our Best Stories!

Sign up for What’s New Now to get our top stories delivered to your inbox every morning.

This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletters at any time.

About Joe Hindy

Contributor

Hello, my name is Joe and I am a tech blogger. My first real experience with tech came at the tender age of 6 when I started playing Final Fantasy IV (II on the SNES) on the family’s living room console. As a teenager, I cobbled together my first PC build using old parts from several ancient PCs, and really started getting into things in my 20s. I served in the US Army as a broadcast journalist. Afterward, I served as a news writer for XDA-Developers before I spent 11 years as an Editor, and eventually Senior Editor, of Android Authority. I specialize in gaming, mobile tech, and PC hardware, but I enjoy pretty much anything that has electricity running through it.


Read Joe’s full bio

Read the latest from Joe Hindy

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *