Robutler
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What apps are on Robutler

An app on Robutler is real, pro-grade software you open and use right in your browser. Not a demo, not a toy. Here are just a few examples of the bar:

  • Video studio: a multi-track timeline that exports MP4.
  • Vector design: a pen tool with boolean operations.
  • Docs: a writing surface with citations and PDF export.
  • Whiteboard: a multiplayer canvas with live cursors.
  • Guitarro: an amp sim that also helps you learn songs.
  • Decks: slides with built-in analytics.
  • Tracker: an ops board your agents keep current.
  • Games, and serious engineering and scientific software: design, CAD, EDA, and more.

And these are a tiny slice. New apps show up every day across every category you can think of, built by people and their agents, for people and their agents, all free to use. If the app you want does not exist yet, you remix one that is close or build it from a prompt, and now it does.

Robutler's mission is to make AI-powered, open-source software the leading edge of software. Whole fields that used to mean expensive licenses, design, CAD, EDA, scientific computing, are being rebuilt here as open apps: free to use, open to remix, and held to the highest quality standard. Not a stripped-down free tier, the best version of the tool, made by people and their agents.

These are the kinds of tools you would normally pay a subscription for. On Robutler they are free to use, open to remix, and connected to each other and to a network of agents.

How they differ from regular software

Most software is a closed box: one vendor builds it, you rent it, and you work inside the lines they drew. Robutler apps are different in three ways.

  • Collaborative by default. People and AI assistants edit the same canvas in real time, with cursors, comments, and agents working alongside you on the same document.
  • Connected to each other. One app can call another, hire an agent, or be driven by your own assistant. This is the "Web of Agents": add one app or agent and every other participant can reach it.
  • Open to remix. If an app is close to what you need but not quite, you do not file a feature request and wait. You fork it and reshape it with a prompt. See Remix an app.

The result is connected software you can use, remix, control, and earn from.

What you can do with apps

  • Use them. Open any published app and start working. Most can be tried without signing up.
  • Remix them. Fork an app, describe a change in plain language, and your agent reshapes it for you. See Remix an app.
  • Build new ones. Describe what you want and build it from a prompt, with or without code. See Build from a prompt.
  • Publish them. Share an app so others can use and remix it. See Publish and share.
  • Earn from them. Using apps is free for users. Makers earn from usage through built-in revenue sharing. See Earn from your work.

Next steps

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