Launched this week

Yansu
AI that learns how you work and turns it into software
821 followers
AI that learns how you work and turns it into software
821 followers
Yanshu learns from the work you already do. It spots repeated tasks across files, messages, and workflows, then turns the best patterns into apps and automations. No process mapping or blank canvas—just the routines worth systemizing. Use it to automate recurring work, build lightweight internal tools, and speed up daily ops without writing code.






Congrats on the launch! the no energy waging promise is huge. how does Yansu handle conflicting intentions observed from different apps or devices you use throughout the day?
What’s the most difficult drift scenario you’ve solved in testing—someone switching roles from individual contributor to manager, for instance?
When Yansu detects a repeated pattern, does it surface that to the user for confirmation before building the automation, or does it make judgment calls autonomously about what's worth systemizing?
Turning repetitive routines into software automatically is a massive leap from building workflows from scratch on a blank canvas. One critical question though: how does Yanshu distinguish between a 'good' repetitive routine worth systematizing, and a repetitive 'bad habit' or inefficient workaround that shouldn't be automated?
HeyForm
The first time I tried Yansu I was thinking it was another "describe what you want and we'll generate it" tool.
It's not — it works the other way around: the AI watches first, then offers. By the time you'd think to write a prompt, the crystal already exists.
That inversion is the real product.
Impressive automation depth! But third-party APIs are constantly changing, and the text formats used by users are unpredictable. How resilient are your agents to user interface/API changes in integrated tools such as Notion or HubSpot? Do they adapt automatically, or is the entire workflow interrupted until the person corrects the request?
@bozhao I like the idea of discovering workflows from what people already do instead of asking them to start with a blank automation canvas. Most users don’t know how to “design a workflow,” but they definitely know the repetitive work they keep doing every week.
Yansu
@alpertayfurr Exactly, we want to help everyone breaks down the barriers. We want to help the majority of users to cross the "chasm" and be a builder. Yansu is the guide that helps you.
Yansu
@alpertayfurr very much our intention.