I came into Atlas seriously hyped after hands‑on time with @Dia Browser and @Perplexity 's Comet. And yes—Atlas clearly “gets” multi‑step tasks. You can feel the maturity of an agent that’s spent time manipulating real browsers from inside containers. But it also feels like a browser that doesn’t understand the basics of being a browser: - Extensions: You can install them, but they’re invisible in the UI. That makes simple stuff—like logging in with a password manager—basically impossible. In 2025. Awkward. - Import: No Chrome, no Comet, no Dia. It’s Safari or nothing. That’s a head‑scratch when you’re courting power users with established stacks. It reads like a move to reduce server bills by offloading more work into a local browser… while overlooking the core ergonomics that make a browser your daily home. Net: impressive agentic brains, missing everyday browser bones. If Atlas is going to be the place I live on the web, it needs to respect the muscle memory and essentials of modern browsing—starting with visible extensions and sane imports.