Reviewers describe Browserbase as a clean, lightweight tool that makes browser-based AI work easier to organize and quicker to try, especially for running tasks without jumping between apps. The lone user praises its speed, simple workflow, and all-in-one feel, but also wants better beginner tutorials, more interface customization, and fewer slowdowns on heavier AI tasks. Founder feedback from the makers of
Spine adds a technical note: it is seen as easy to use, fast to implement, and strong out of the box for browsing capabilities.
Hey Product Hunt 👋
I'm Shrey,
Over the last year, we've watched AI agents get remarkably good at using browsers. But we've also noticed something strange: every time an agent visits a website, it starts from zero.
It re-explores the interface, re-discovers buttons, re-learns navigation paths, and re-finds the same workflows it already completed yesterday.
Humans don't work that way.
Once you learn how to search Zillow listings, review a GitHub PR, or book a campsite on Recreation.gov, you don't relearn the entire website every time you come back.
Agents shouldn't have to either.
That's why we built Browse.sh, an open catalog of browser skills that agents can install and reuse across the web. Instead of exploring a website from scratch, agents load the relevant skill and execute against a known workflow.
The result is faster execution, lower token costs, more reliable outcomes, and better multi-site workflows. Today, the catalog includes 250+ skills across real websites and applications, including partner skills like submitting reimbursements on Ramp, creating projects on Lovable, extracting document data on Reducto, and many more.
And when a skill doesn't exist yet, Browse.sh can create one.
Behind the scenes, Browse.sh is powered by Autobrowse, our system that runs tasks in real browsers, analyzes traces, DOM changes, network activity, screenshots, and failures, then continuously improves the workflow until it converges on a durable strategy.
Over time, one successful browser run becomes a reusable skill that anyone can install.
Browse.sh is open source, free to use, and available today.
We'd love your feedback:
- Which websites do your agents struggle with most today?
- What skills should we add next?
- What workflows are you automating with AI agents?
We'll be around all day answering questions. Thanks for checking us out 🤞
Product Hunt
The "muscle memory" framing resonates — we deal with a similar problem in Telegram moderation where the AI needs to accumulate trust signals from cross-community behavior rather than re-evaluating from scratch each interaction. Curious how you persist agent state across sessions — is the memory layer per-task, per-user, or per-organization? The trade-offs around isolation vs reusability feel close to what we hit when designing cross-group reputation.
Hello hunters! We're so excited to be back and launching browse.sh. I'm Paul, founder of Browserbase. If you have any questions, I'd be happy to help answer them.
Browserbase
The web was built for humans, and we are happy to launch this skills catalog that finally makes the web a playground for your Claude Code! You're building a web app that needs data that doesn't exist on an API, or you're just looking to automate your weekly lunch planning? Browse.sh is for you!
Looks nicely done, looking forward to try it !