Genesis
A browser automation service starts with the simplest useful promise: a browser an agent can actually operate.
A verified development log · 2025—2026
Not with another dashboard. With a memory of what happened: the click, the screen, the failing request, the thought that changed the build.
A build, measured honestly
These are not growth metrics. They are the paper trail of a product learning where the browser breaks down.
The point was the moment between “it broke” and “I can show you exactly how.” ThinkRun became a way to turn that moment into evidence an agent can use.
Customer selects “Pay $59.00”
/charge returns 500
Console points to an undefined total.
Evidence becomes a reviewable next move.
Six chapters, one increasingly clear idea
A browser automation service starts with the simplest useful promise: a browser an agent can actually operate.
Identity, resilience, and a player arrive. The product learns that a session needs a history, not just an outcome.
The agent gets closer to the browser already signed in on your machine—without pretending control is trust.
A browser moment becomes portable: shareable, embeddable, legible to people and to the tools they use.
Video, activity, and uploads converge. The build stops asking users to translate the bug before help can begin.
Search, connectors, and a clearer public face: the hard-earned machinery gets an invitation.
02 / THE MEMORY THAT SURVIVED
Every detour mattered: an auth outage, a missing CORS rule, an overconfident claim that had to be recomputed. The wiki held the why when commit messages only held the what.
“The evidence is the product.”
ThinkRun’s work is not to make agents look autonomous. It is to leave enough of a trail that a person can understand, review, and trust what happens next.
THE NEXT FRAME IS YOURS
ThinkRun turns the screen into a shared reference point—so the person who saw the problem and the agent that can fix it finally start from the same place.
Numbers are a verified historical snapshot from 9 July 2026: 1,571 commits, 572 merged PRs, 62 PRD threads, 264 memory pages, 323 days, and a 155-commit peak week. Sources: docs/thinkrun-timeline-notes.md, raw git history, and the ThinkRun memory wiki. No lifetime cost or token total is shown because the record does not support one.