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  • polonbike 2 hours

    Congrats on the launch. One complaint: RPA this, non-RPA that, but you never explain what it means. I would write down the acronym fully once at the first mention on the landing page.

    fchishtie 2 hours

    Thank you!! Yeah that's a good point - it's been so engrained in our brains, appreciate the feedback

  • viveksingh_17 1 hours

    [flagged]

  • a-dub 1 hours

    i'm curious: how does the steady state error rate of a stochastic automated system like this compare with the downtime and errors that come from a (brittle) deterministic bridge that can fail with upgrades? what does the observability look like? (i'm guessing one feature is that the execution log including images/screenshots for each transaction gets saved, which is probably a huge improvement.)

    fchishtie 58 minutes

    it’s a good q - we experimented a lot with computer use / agentic automation and found that at scale a hybrid solution where the automations run as deterministic code with agents for recovery is the best - running automations as code is faster & cheaper & when you’re doing critical tasks (like updating patient records) you don’t want an agent to potentially mess something up.

    previously writing RPA code used to take a long time - using AI (and its infinite patience) we can write more durable code that covers more edge cases

    And since they’re code based it’s pretty straightforward to an agents monitor them and update their code when upgrades to the underlying system happen etc…

    for observability - we have workflow execution logs that store text, videos and screenshots so an agent or a human can debug them - lots and lots of webhooks when things break ! (:

  • throw03172019 1 hours

    Does this only revert back to LLM Vision when it catches an error? I.e once the RPA / workflow is built once, it’s efficient for running multiple times (until it catches an error state)?

    fchishtie 48 minutes

    yes effectively, but we use LLM vision in multiple places - for context, there are multiple ways an RPA can fail:

    1. RPA code breaks (ex: throws an exception if a window does not exist) 2. RPA reports success but was clicking / typing in the wrong place 3. Underlying system breaks (virtual machine / legacy software)

    the skill we have in our MCP is to build the RPA code to throw exceptions where possible so an LLM can understand the context and recover

    to avoid false success states we add LLM vision steps in the workflow itself to error out if it sees that the system is in the wrong state

    and for the underlying system breaking it can be as simple as having a CRON job that checks the status of the process / the health of the VM and running a script to reboot the system

    it depends on the system but the pattern we've seen with RPAs is you can catch maybe 80% of the edge cases in the first week it's been rolled out

  • throw03172019 2 hours

    Please make your trust center public if you are focusing on healthcare AI companies…the footer link is dead.

    fchishtie 2 hours

    Thanks for flagging this!

  • throw03172019 44 minutes

    How does this compare with CyberDesk (also YC)?

    fchishtie 37 minutes

    We think CyberDesk is great - our main difference is I believe the primary driver for their automations is computer use / agent based - whereas our automations use agents to create/maintain/support python code

  • dragonsenseiguy 2 hours

    Small website nitpick: I feel like the "In production with" section's companies logos should be a bit darker, I could barely tell there was something there.

    fchishtie 1 hours

    yes good call out - that customer wheel is so overdue for an update

  • Boxxed 3 hours

    What the deuce is an "RPA"?

    fchishtie 3 hours

    It's a script that simulates clicks/keystrokes on Desktop/Web

    saheed_laminar 3 hours

    Its an acronym for Robotic Process Automation. It usually means triggering mouse clicks and key stokes to perform tasks

  • snozolli 1 hours

    Computer use agents that run on Windows VMs or in the browser. On-premise, cloud

    I think you meant premises.

    https://brians.wsu.edu/2016/05/30/premise-premises/

    fchishtie 1 hours

    thank you - good catch (:

    throw03172019 1 hours

    I’ve never heard a customer say “on-premises” when talking about servers they run. On-premise is usually the term regardless if it is “correct”.

    snozolli 51 minutes

    54% of Americans read below a 6th grade level. People word-mash "alot", "atleast", and now "eachother" all the time. Sports commentators use verse when they mean versus.

    I'm not suggesting that you correct your customers, but there's no reason to sink to the lowest common denominator when writing.

  • mingabunga 3 hours

    Could you use this to test new releases of software for bugs? A bit like TDD but for GUI interactions

    fchishtie 3 hours

    Yes! we have customers doing that

  • theaniketmaurya 2 hours

    Congrats on the launch! Legacy system users are also one of the slowest to adopt AI. How do you navigate that?

    fchishtie 2 hours

    100% right - we support the AI companies who are selling to the legacy end users - for ex: we don’t sell directly to hospitals, but an AI scribe for doctors that already has a hospital as a customer, we help them integrate to the hospital’s EMR

    debarshri 2 hours

    Legacy system users are also the one who pays the most for tools and services. We sell to enterprise, I can attest to that. If it is relevant usecase and positioning for the market, it should be fine.

    fchishtie 2 hours

    yeah it’s been interesting to watch, we were surprised initially at how much legacy users actually wanted to adopt AI - I think it’s because of how awful the old software can be to interact with

  • ilundin 41 minutes

    Is the cloud LLM the judge based on screenshots with patient/customer data included ? That seems like a no-go for many countries given privacy concerns ?

    fchishtie 34 minutes

    No patient/customer data included in the screenshots - in production we’d basically find some “region” of the screen to screenshot that would help an LLM say yes/no to - ex: “is the nav bar green and does it say Insert Note”

    ilundin 21 minutes

    Ok, that seems doable if working perfect, but what is the tool output "i can see the patient list with search functionality and 30 patients" thing in the demo ? Is this not vision detected ? Or are you digging into windows api (making non standard windows components/widgets non working)?

    fchishtie 9 minutes

    ah for the fake EMR demo I was a bit less strict with claude, it was vision detected likely - our MCP has tools for taking screenshots of the screen and inspecting the windows accessibility tree etc

  • throw03172019 2 hours

    So AI companies would install this on their customer (practices) computers?

    fchishtie 2 hours

    Yes, more likely on a virtual machine running the legacy software

    throw03172019 2 hours

    Thanks. Most practices are not tech savvy. So how would the VM setup work in their own network / machines?

    fchishtie 1 hours

    Yeah that’s true - in those cases we’ve either worked with their outsourced IT provider to spin up VMs for us or have had to spin up our own VM and connect through a VPN - IT can be very fun…

  • throw03172019 31 minutes

    Biggest question is how much of this can be stored / processed on our own infra and with our own lifecycle rules? For example, this can touch a lot of PHI. Screenshots, videos, JSON inputs/outputs etc.

    fchishtie 27 minutes

    logs get written in our customers' premises on a bucket of their choosing (: so PHI doesn't leave their VPC

    throw03172019 23 minutes

    That’s perfect. Is this documented somewhere? Would love a deep dive on security / setup tweaks for data.

    fchishtie 10 minutes

    happy to share more over email! you can reach me at faiz@minicor.com