Notte provides a full-stack framework for building, deploying, and scaling web AI agents via a single API. It transforms the internet into an agent-friendly environment by mapping websites into structured, natural language descriptions, enabling agents to navigate and interact effectively.
Notte leads in open-source benchmarks for web agent performance. It achieved the highest self-reported success rate (86.2%) and LLM-verified completion (79%). Notte also demonstrated the fastest execution time (47 seconds per task) and an impressive 96.6% task reliability (percentage of tasks successfully completed at least once across multiple attempts).
Read more about the benchmarks here: https://github.com/nottelabs/open-operator-evals
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notte.cc's answer:
Notte is built with Python and accessible via Python SDK or REST API. It performs deep DOM parsing and uses a semantic abstraction layer informed by graph-based reasoning — though the graph itself isn’t fully materialised in code. The SDK exposes a clean interface for LLM integration.
notte.cc's answer:
Notte turns the web into structured, semantic maps tailored for LLMs — enabling perception, navigation, and action. Unlike traditional browser automation, Notte abstracts away fragile HTML into high-level actions and natural language descriptions, reducing hallucinations, tokens, and latency.
notte.cc's answer:
Notte is purpose-built for LLM agents. It doesn’t just click DOM elements — it understands the intent behind them. That means faster, more reliable agents, no brittle scripts, and seamless integration via API or SDK. It replaces scraping + Playwright stacks with one clean abstraction layer.
notte.cc's answer:
Developers building LLM agents, automation workflows, or AI-native applications. Early adopters in infra, QA, RPA, and AI tooling who want to go beyond brittle web scraping and fragile automation toward agentic, semantic control of the internet.
notte.cc's answer:
Notte was founded by Andrea and Lucas, two ML researchers who met at EPFL in 2019 and have been building together ever since. After working across top research labs, they saw a clear gap: existing browser automation tools weren’t built for LLMs. Notte is their response — a framework that makes the web usable for agents through structured, semantic understanding. It’s designed to bridge research and real-world execution.
Based on our record, Hashnode seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 133 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
We looked into a few different providers including GitBook, Docusaurus, Hashnode, Fern and Mintlify. There were various factors in the decision but the TLDR is that while we manage our SDKs with Fern, we chose Mintlify for docs as it had the best writing experience, supported custom React components, and was more affordable for hosting on a custom domain. Both Fern and Mintlify pull from the same single source of... - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
Hashnode write dev blogs and build a reputation. - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
In a real-life example of a blogging platform like Hashnode or Dev.to, for example, they have very robust RBAC systems. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
The other page was a list of my blog posts that were posted in Hashnode, fetched using Graph QL using Hashnode's API. The posts would then be shown when the user navigated to /post/ , after triggering another request to Hashnode's API. I also built my own solution for i18n and theming and relied on styled-components to do most of the CSS heavy lifting and customization. - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
The other big option is to post blogs or notes. It's pretty simple to start a blog right here on Dev.to, or on Hashnode, two blogging platforms specifically for coding. There's also a great community platform on Codedex.io where you can write blog posts, although you do need to complete a few lessons to "unlock" the community features. In these cases, there's already an audience and community on the site, so it's... - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
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Browser Use - Make websites accessible for agents
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