
Clevrr Computer
Computer use but with OpenAI and Gemini models







About | Details |
---|---|
Name: | Clevrr Computer |
Submited By: | Blaze Koepp |
Release Date | 8 months ago |
Website | Visit Website |
Category | Open Source GitHub Tech |
An open-source implementation of Anthropic's Computer Use to perform basic tasks using AI Agents. Currently supports Langchain, Azure OpenAI Models, and Gemini models. Contributions and supports are more than welcomed to improve the functionality.
Huge congrats to the Clevrr Computer team on today's launch! I love how you've democratized access to AI-powered task automation with open-source goodness. Here's a curious question: What's the most creative/basic task (e.g., email sorting, content gen?) you've seen users automate so far with Clevrr Computer's Langchain, Azure OpenAI, or Gemini models?
8 months ago
This is awesome! Computer use is definitely the next step with AI. Quick question, can you command the AI with voice prompts or text prompts only? Congratulations on your launch team!
8 months ago
This is the potential to change how I use artificial intelligence in everyday work.
8 months ago
Impressive work. The integration with various AI models could really enhance my experience.
8 months ago
Clevrr Computer can really save a lot effort in dealing with basic tasks! Congrats on the launch and good luck to Clevrr Computer.
8 months ago
Check out the whole functionality, how it works, and use cases on the X thread <a href="https://x.com/yuvrajdagur12/status/1849725131104583891?s=46" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer">https://x.com/yuvrajdagur12/stat...</a>
8 months ago
Whoa, Clevrr Computer sounds like it's taking AI interaction to a whole new level! The idea of an AI agent that can actually control your computer is mind-blowing. I'm both excited and a bit nervous about the possibilities here. Being able to automate tasks like replying to messages or doing web research could be a huge time-saver. But I'm glad they've put some limitations in place - that's definitely important. I'm really curious to see how this performs in real-world scenarios and how it compares to Anthropic's model. Might have to check out that GitHub repo and give it a spin. Anyone else thinking of trying this out?
8 months ago