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Nimbus

Agentic Browser with Claude Code UX

Mac
Productivity
Artificial Intelligence
YC Application
Vercel Day
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Hunted bysyllogismossyllogismos

Nimbus is an agentic browser inspired by Claude Code UX. Tell it what you want in plain English. It handles the mechanical work: clicks, forms, file pickers, multi-tab coordination and pauses to ask only when there's something only you can decide. Inspired by the way Claude Code feels for coding; built for the rest of the web. Built from the ground up, not an extension. Free for the first 500 founding users forever.

Top comment

Hello PH, I'm Anil.

Most of my day is split between a terminal and a browser. And the browser part started becoming increasingly annoying, while on the terminal so many complex things happen with such a simple UX.

When I'm doing something complex on the web, I just want to think about the problem at hand. Instead I'm fighting the mechanical stuff navigating across tabs, finding the right files, copy-pasting between sites, dealing with how every site implements basic things differently.

The thing I hate most: I download a file in one tab, then have to upload that same file in another tab. Every browser implements the file picker differently. And nothing annoys me more than triggering the native file picker to hunt for a file I literally just downloaded.

So I built Nimbus. The agent handles all the mechanical work, and gives you the freedom to think about the problem at hand.

Built from the ground up, not an extension.

First 500 users are free forever: Download for macOS from here https://usenimbus.app

Happy to answer any questions.

Comment highlights

The download-then-upload loop is one of those frictions that's so normalized nobody talks about it but everyone hates it. 'Built from the ground up, not an extension' is doing a lot of work in that sentence — curious what made you go that route vs the extension approach technically?

the download-in-one-tab upload-in-another problem is so painfully real , I deal with this constantly when scraping data for college assignments and it's one of those things you don't realise is stealing your time until someone points it out. built from scratch rather than an extension is the right call too, extensions always feel like they're fighting the browser rather than controlling it. just one doubt when the agent pauses to ask me something mid-task, does it remember the full context of what it was doing when I reply, or does longer tasks risk losing the thread?

The amount of time spent just being a human bridge moving files and data back and forth between different browser tabs is ridiculous. Shifting all that mechanical grinding to a text bar instead of doing a thousand clicks a day sounds like a massive quality-of-life upgrade for daily workflows.

Merging an agentic browser with a Claude style UX is a smart move. How does Nimbus handle multi-tab reasoning when a task requires data from several different sites?

About Nimbus on Product Hunt

Agentic Browser with Claude Code UX

Nimbus launched on Product Hunt on May 15th, 2026 and earned 82 upvotes and 14 comments, placing #27 on the daily leaderboard. Nimbus is an agentic browser inspired by Claude Code UX. Tell it what you want in plain English. It handles the mechanical work: clicks, forms, file pickers, multi-tab coordination and pauses to ask only when there's something only you can decide. Inspired by the way Claude Code feels for coding; built for the rest of the web. Built from the ground up, not an extension. Free for the first 500 founding users forever.

Nimbus was featured in Mac (103.5k followers), Productivity (651.7k followers), Artificial Intelligence (468.5k followers), YC Application (46 followers) and Vercel Day (8 followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 234.8k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.

Who hunted Nimbus?

Nimbus was hunted by syllogismos. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.

Want to see how Nimbus stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.