Welcome to BrowserOS
BrowserOS is a new kind of operating system that runs on top of the web. It replaces traditional app interfaces with a single, intelligent layer that understands your intent and generates exactly what you need, powered entirely by AI.
BrowserOS replaces traditional app interfaces with a single intelligent layer. It understands your intent, shows only what matters, and generates the right interface in real time.
You do not open apps or navigate tabs. You interact directly with messages, events, documents, and tasks. No clutter. No switching. Just your work.
It is built on five core ideas:
Entity-first design that centers on content, not containers.
Generative UI that adapts to your task in the moment.
Proactive assistance that brings the right information forward.
Universal coverage across familiar services and unknown ones.
Memory that learns and improves with every interaction.
BrowserOS is not a better way to manage your tools. It is how you stop needing them.
BrowserOS is in active development. Right now, we’re testing internal prototypes that demonstrate the core engine behind the system. These early builds focus on how the OS interprets information, remembers context, and generates responsive interfaces on demand. Nothing is public yet. We’re laying the groundwork carefully, building a foundation for a new kind of interface that doesn’t rely on traditional apps.
The first version of BrowserOS will focus on simplifying how you work with the information that matters most. Instead of opening different apps, you’ll see your messages, events, documents, and tasks in one unified interface. Each item will be rendered in a clean, interactive format, tailored to what you need to do. Early support will include connectors for Gmail, GitHub, and Calendar, along with memory-backed workflows and simple automations. It’s not about managing apps. It’s about removing them entirely.
Over time, BrowserOS will replace the entire concept of navigating between tools. You won’t think in terms of platforms, accounts, or tabs. Instead, the OS will surface exactly what’s relevant; based on your goals, your schedule, and your past activity. Interfaces will be generated in real time, and the system will learn how to support you more intelligently with each interaction. This is a step toward computing that feels more like conversation and less like navigation.
We’re not ready to launch yet, but we’re getting close. Join the waitlist to follow our progress and be the first to try BrowserOS when we open early access.