On October 23, 2025, OpenAI announced that it had acquired Software Applications, Inc. the developer behind the AI tool known as “Sky” for Mac. The deal, which brings the Sky team into OpenAI’s fold, gives OpenAI a ready-made product designed for macOS, along with a small but experienced engineering team. While financial terms were not disclosed, the move marks OpenAI’s third acquisition of the year. Sky, described as an AI assistant that works across Mac windows and apps, will now become part of OpenAI’s broader strategy to embed intelligent assistance more deeply into everyday computing workflows.
What Sky Actually Does
Sky is positioned not just as a chatbot or helper, but as a digital assistant tightly integrated into the Mac environment. It monitors what apps and windows are open, understands what the user is doing, and offers to perform tasks that span multiple apps writing, planning, sorting, coding, etc. What sets it apart is its ability to “see” what’s on the Mac screen and act using natural-language commands. For example, a user could ask Sky to “send this link and summary to John” while in a browser, and Sky will identify the link, summarise the page, and send the message via Mail or Messages. Developers behind Sky previously created “Workflow”, later acquired by Apple and turned into Shortcuts.
Why This Matters for OpenAI
The acquisition of Sky provides OpenAI with several strategic advantages. First, it gives OpenAI a working product designed for Mac, reducing the time and effort needed to build an assistant from scratch. Second, it brings in a team with deep experience in automation and macOS workflows, which aligns with OpenAI’s ambition to extend AI beyond chat into productivity tools. Third, by acquiring Sky, OpenAI positions itself to make AI more proactive: not just responding to queries, but performing actions on behalf of users across the applications they already use. This helps shift the conversation from “ask a model a question” to “let AI assist me in what I’m doing”.
For everyday Mac users and professionals, the Sky acquisition means that the promise of an AI assistant embedded into their workflow is closer to reality. Instead of switching between an AI chat interface and their apps, users can operate within their workspace and ask an assistant to help directly. This has implications for productivity, accessibility, automation and even the way we think about user interfaces. With OpenAI’s resources behind it, Sky could become a standard feature on macOS or even influence how other operating systems treat AI assistance in the future.
However, execution matters. To deliver on this promise, OpenAI must ensure seamless integration, robust privacy controls (especially given the access to screen/app context), intuitive user experience and reliable action execution. The move also raises expectations that AI assistants will go beyond passive help and start performing workflows on behalf of users.
The Bigger Picture in AI and Desktop Computing
This acquisition signals a broader shift in how AI is being applied. Instead of treating AI as a standalone application or service, the next phase appears to be embedding it within everyday tools making AI assistance a native part of the operating system. By acquiring Sky, OpenAI is positioning itself in that transition.
The timing is also noteworthy. With Apple, Google and Microsoft all investing heavily in AI assistants and productivity tools, OpenAI’s move into the Mac ecosystem may escalate competition over how integrated and proactive these assistants can become. It also suggests a potential shift in the locus of AI from cloud-based chatbot to desktop collaborator.
For developers and power users, the flexibility of Sky (allowing custom tools, shortcuts, shell scripts, etc.) may redefine how automation is built in the future. A Mac user could conceive of custom workflows triggered by natural language rather than code. This could democratise automation further and change the relationship between user and machine.
While the acquisition is promising, there are important questions and risks to consider. First, the integration process may take time, meaning users will not see full benefits immediately. Second, privacy and security will be critical, a tool that “sees” what you’re doing requires strong safeguards to avoid misuse or data leakage. Third, competition is intense; Apple may embed something similar natively, or other companies may compete with cross-platform assistants.
There is also a business challenge: how will this feature be monetised? Will it be free, subscription-based, or tied to OpenAI’s larger ecosystem? Will users accept the trade-offs in privacy for the added convenience? How will custom tool creation be managed to avoid complexity or fragility?
Finally, user adoption may depend on how intuitive and reliable the assistant is. If users perceive it as finicky, unreliable or invasive, the hype may fade. On the other hand, if it works seamlessly, this could redefine how we use our computers.
OpenAI’s acquisition of Sky represents a meaningful step in the evolution of AI assistants one that moves from answering questions to doing work. By bringing in a Mac-centric product with deep automation roots, OpenAI is signalling that the next battleground for AI may be our desktops and daily workflows.
For Mac users, this could signal a future where the assistant isn’t a separate app you open, but an integral part of what you’re already doing. For the industry, it suggests that the boundaries between operating systems, productivity tools and AI are blurring.
Ultimately, realising this vision will depend on execution, trust and user value. If OpenAI and the Sky team deliver, the way we interact with our computers could change significantly. If not, this may be another ambitious acquisition that struggles to reach its promise. Time will tell.




