ThinkRun
development log / verified

An origin story with receipts

Make the browser
work legible.

ThinkRun began with a stubborn belief: browser work done by people and agents should leave a clear, replayable trail—not a vague “it broke somewhere” handoff.

BUILD RECEIPT
$ git rev-list --count HEAD
1571
$ status
trace: still running
Scroll through the evidence

Not a launch myth.
A build log you can feel.

Every number on this page is drawn from the project’s own git history and development memory. The gaps are part of the story too: there is no lifetime token or cost figure here because the record does not support one.

1,571commits in the project history
572unique merged pull requests
62PRD thread pages
323days from first commit to timeline snapshot

The rhythm wasn’t smooth.

weekly commit density
hover a bar to inspect

First commit 2025-08-20Peak week 155 commits · Mar 16–22, 2026Snapshot 2026-07-09

A browser is not a black box.
It’s a trail of decisions.

ThinkRun grew from browser automation into a recording and reproduction layer: work can be captured, shared, inspected, and handed to the next human or agent with its context intact.

THINKRUN / EXECUTION TRACEINTERACTIVE · SELECT A STAGE
THINK
“The product had to make browser work inspectable.”

The early service established a browser automation foundation. The rest of the build kept asking a harder question: what should survive after the browser has moved on?

The six movements

Each release changed the shape of the trail.

Choose a phase, or keep scrolling. These are the milestones that turned a browser automation service into ThinkRun.

The process became part of the product.

The history contains a quiet but consequential practice: when a number was wrong, the team recomputed it. When a claim was too broad, it was narrowed. The page you are reading follows the same rule.

Recompute

The timeline refresh corrected its total from 1,570 to 1,571 after a raw-git verification.

Keep the trail

Development memory supplied the meaning behind terse commit subjects; git supplied the authoritative counts.

Say what is absent

No lifetime token or dollar figure is shown because the historical record does not contain one.

ThinkRun

Browser work,
with a memory.

A record someone can replay. A handoff an agent can understand. A build story that keeps its receipts.

Visit thinkrun.ai
Verified against the project’s · snapshot generated 2026-07-09.
Source methods recorded in docs/thinkrun-timeline-notes.md: raw git history establishes the 1,571 commits and 572 unique merged pull requests; the refreshed memory weave establishes 62 PRD threads. The first commit is dated 2025-08-20 and the snapshot is dated 2026-07-09, yielding 323 days. The peak weekly count is 155 for 2026-W12.
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