Give every AI agent persistent work context
Maintains a continuously updating changelog of what is happening across HubSpot, Slack, Zendesk, and the rest of the business stack, then serves it to your agents through a single MCP endpoint. Cuts roughly 90% of the tokens you would burn by giving agents raw API access while producing higher-quality outputs — the agent reads the curated context instead of crawling tools live. Aimed at the moment when "agent memory" stops being a research project and starts being infrastructure.
| Rating | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Reviews | — | — | — | — |
| Price | Contact for pricing | Included with ChatGPT | Free | Contact for pricing |
| Free tier | 30-day full access, no card | Free tier available | Free | Free tier available |
| API access | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
OpenAI's official Chrome extension that lets Codex navigate web pages and complete multi-step tasks directly in the browser — fill forms, scrape data, drive web apps without copy-pasting between tabs. Browser-native agents are the new assistant battleground, and this is the most polished option for ChatGPT users who want their AI to actually do the work rather than just describe it.
Open-source browser automation built on Bun rather than Node, with an API designed for AI agent workflows from the ground up. Faster startup and lower memory overhead than Puppeteer or Playwright when spinning up disposable browser sessions for agents to drive — useful for any developer building autonomous web tasks at scale.
Schedules recurring AI agent runs with one command and zero infrastructure — no servers, queues, or wrappers required. The plumbing layer for anyone running agents that need to wake up on a schedule rather than only on a user prompt, which covers most production agent use cases once you move past chat.