OpenAI began rolling out scheduled tasks in ChatGPT on Wednesday, a launch that retires the older Pulse feature within 14 days.
The company announced the update Wednesday, pointing to a sidebar hub where users watch every active task, see exactly when each one runs next, and open it for changes. From there, people can pause, resume, edit, or delete any request without rebuilding it. Tasks created inside a project, however, cannot reach that project's files.
Users can pin a job to an exact clock time or a looser window such as morning, afternoon, or evening, giving routines a more natural shape, OpenAI explained. Monitoring tasks go further, quietly scanning the web and connected apps for changes, then flagging people only when something genuinely merits a look.
The new experience reaches Plus, Pro, Business, and Enterprise subscribers across both web and mobile, though the company has not said when free accounts might follow. It says every task now runs faster and more reliably than the version it replaces. Push and desktop alerts still hinge on the permissions a user grants after setting up a first task.
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Observers frame the shift as a bet that an assistant grows stickier once it stops waiting to be summoned and starts acting on its own. The new Scheduled page hands users a place to audit what the tool has promised, commentators noted.
A reminder app earns trust precisely because it shows its commitments in one spot. ChatGPT is edging that way, moving from a passive chat box toward a tool that quietly manages ongoing work. Rivals are chasing the same ground, one analysis reported.
Two guardrails apply, since each task runs no more than once an hour, and idle jobs can pause on their own after a stretch of inactivity. Pulse, the daily summary tool the company introduced last year, will vanish within two weeks, OpenAI confirmed.
ChatGPT first introduced tasks in early 2025, when the company shipped a beta for Plus, Pro, and Team users. That version let people line up one-time or recurring actions by simply asking the chatbot. The new page folds the idea into a single surface OpenAI hopes users will revisit and trust.
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