We built Coasty to be an AI employee one that controls a full desktop like a human. Browses, clicks, types, solves CAPTCHAs, fills out forms. Runs on its own isolated cloud VM so it never touches your machine.
Last week we stress-tested it by having it apply to 15 virtual assistant job postings on LinkedIn. It filled out every application form, uploaded a resume, wrote custom cover letters, and submitted. 3 companies responded asking to schedule an interview.
No one knew it wasn't a person.
That's when it clicked for us we're not building a dev tool. We're building a workforce. Coasty scored 82% on the OSWorld benchmark (the hardest real-world computer task benchmark), beating every other agent including OpenAI and Google's.
Coasty
@jannu @nitish_kovuru Reading this, something interesting stood out.
A lot of tools today describe themselves as "AI employees", but when you look at the architecture the real shift seems to be something deeper: agents finally getting their own computers to operate in.
Most current agent setups still run inside a developer’s machine, a browser sandbox, or some limited automation layer. Giving each agent its own isolated VM changes the model quite a bit — the agent stops being just a script and starts behaving more like an operator in an environment.
Curious how you think about this internally.
Do you see Coasty primarily evolving as a platform for deploying AI employees, or more as infrastructure for running computer-use agents at scale?
Computer Using Agents by LLMHub
Really good product and the OS World benchmark results are just a cherry on top, really good work and getting a product out that actually works rather than just demos