Genesis
The first browser automation service established the core: a browser that could be operated through a simple agent interface.
ThinkRun began with a simple belief: agents should not merely ask browsers for answers. They should be able to work inside them — visibly, safely, and alongside the people who care about the result.
The interesting problem was never “can an AI click a button?” It was making every click legible: a task, a plan, an action, a result — and a human who can see the whole chain.
thinkrun › research the market PLAN Open sources and compare claims NAVIGATE 3 sources opened THINK “Need a primary source here.” EXTRACT Findings structured for review ✓ Session visible. Work inspectable.
The development record is unusually complete: the decisions, reversals, outages, reviews, and release receipts survived alongside the code.
The first browser automation service established the core: a browser that could be operated through a simple agent interface.
Reliability became product work. Authentication, resilient tasks, and a video player made the system more accountable when real work was on the line.
The browser could now meet people where they already worked: the Chrome extension, local bridge, and shareable sessions brought the agent out of the server room.
A run became something a team could pass around. oEmbed, MCP parity, and hybrid upload turned execution into a portable artifact.
Work needed a replay. Web recording, the Activity Hub, and subscription billing made the operating layer visible and sustainable.
The work became easier to find and adopt: SPA SEO, a connector gateway, and a single source of truth for pricing prepared ThinkRun for the open web.
ThinkRun’s memory wiki is not a victory lap. It holds the hard parts too: auth outages, billing pivots, deployment regressions, and the reasoning behind the fixes. That is what lets progress compound instead of merely accumulate.
Tap any event in this tiny session to follow the thread. ThinkRun treats a browser run as a readable record, not a black box.
A research run starts with the web — and leaves behind enough context for someone else to decide what to trust.
OPENED 3 SOURCESThinkRun is building the operating layer for agents on the web: capable enough to act, transparent enough to trust, and collaborative enough to share.
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