Khaled Shadid

NeuralAgent - Personal AI Assistant that operates your entire computer

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NeuralAgent operates your entire computer — it sees your screen, opens apps, clicks buttons, and manages files like you would. With Skills, it gains infinite capabilities: connecting to Gmail, Calendar, GitHub, Slack, Notion, and 30+ services through API, UI, and CLI. Just tell it what you want in plain English.

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Khaled Shadid

Hey Product Hunt!

I'm Khaled, founder of NeuralAgent.

NeuralAgent first launched in April 2025 after a simple experiment: what if an AI could actually operate your computer the way a human does? Instead of being stuck inside a chat window, it can see your screen, open apps, click buttons, manage files, and complete tasks across your entire system.

Since that first launch, NeuralAgent has grown quickly and is now used by tens of thousands of users across 169 countries to automate real work on their computers.

NeuralAgent can already operate your entire computer. Skills makes it even more powerful giving it direct API access to Gmail, Google Calendar, GitHub, Slack, Notion, Spotify, Discord, and more. Faster, more reliable, and your screen stays free. And if you need something custom, you can build your own skill for anything with an API or CLI.

You can even build your own Skills for any API, CLI tool, or workflow you want to automate.

Some people also ask how NeuralAgent compares to projects like OpenClaw. NeuralAgent can do everything OpenClaw does, but it also can take over your computer screen and use it like you do. It also is super easy to install (with the click of a button) and is a ready-to-use personal AI assisatant.

Our goal is simple: build a true personal AI assistant that can operate your entire computer.

I’d love to hear from the Product Hunt community:

If you had an AI that could control your computer, what tasks would you want it to automate?

Excited to hear your thoughts and feedback! 🚀

Denis Akindinov

What safeguards prevent NeuralAgent from executing unintended or destructive system actions when interpreting ambiguous plain-English instructions?