NeuralAgent
NeuralAgent is an open-source AI agent that lives on your desktop and operates it the way a person would - moving the mouse, typing, navigating the browser, filling forms and sending email to finish a task. It's multimodal (text and vision), runs modular planner and classifier sub-agents, and works with Claude, GPT, Gemini, Bedrock or local Ollama models so your data can stay on your machine. MIT-licensed; browser tasks currently run via WSL on Windows.
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Our take
NeuralAgent is a rare open-source take on desktop computer-use agents: it actually drives your machine, and being bring-your-own-model you can keep data local with Ollama. MIT-licensed and free is a real draw. It needs technical setup, background browser tasks are Windows-only for now, and reliability depends on the model you plug in - but for a hackable desktop agent it's a strong start.
Best for
Developers and tinkerers who want a free, open-source desktop agent they can run with their own model - including local Ollama - to automate repetitive computer tasks while keeping data on their machine.
Pros
- Open-source (MIT) and free to run
- Drives the real desktop: clicks, typing, browser, forms, email
- Bring-your-own-model: Claude, GPT, Gemini, Bedrock or local Ollama
- Local processing option keeps data on your machine
Cons
- Needs technical setup; not for non-developers
- Background browser tasks currently Windows and WSL only
- Reliability and outcomes are early and community-reported
How it compares
Most computer-use agents are hosted and closed; NeuralAgent's pitch is the opposite - open-source, self-hosted and model-agnostic, so privacy and control sit with you, at the cost of doing the setup and supplying your own model yourself.
Full review
NeuralAgent is an open-source AI agent that lives on your desktop and operates it the way a person would - moving the mouse, typing, navigating the browser, filling forms and sending email to finish a task. It's multimodal (text and vision), runs modular planner and classifier sub-agents, and works with Claude, GPT, Gemini, Bedrock or local Ollama models so your data can stay on your machine. MIT-licensed; browser tasks currently run via WSL on Windows.
Most computer-use agents are hosted and closed; NeuralAgent's pitch is the opposite - open-source, self-hosted and model-agnostic, so privacy and control sit with you, at the cost of doing the setup and supplying your own model yourself.
Cloudkart Trust Graph
3.8/5- Actual Utility4/5
Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)
- Ease of Use3/5
Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)
- Pricing Fairness5/5
Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)
- Reliability3/5
Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)
- Differentiation4/5
Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)
Scored as of . Each score is versioned and auditable; vendors cannot buy it.
How this score is set
- Editorial rubric
- Primary signal — five dimensions, 3.8/5 average.
- Community reviews
- None yet.
- Pricing verified
- Not yet verified
- Independence
- Score set by our editorial team before any affiliate relationship is considered. No vendor can buy it.
Frequently asked questions
- Is NeuralAgent free, and how much does it cost?
- NeuralAgent is open source and free to self-host.
- Who is NeuralAgent best for?
- Developers and tinkerers who want a free, open-source desktop agent they can run with their own model - including local Ollama - to automate repetitive computer tasks while keeping data on their machine.
- How is NeuralAgent rated on Cloudkart.ai?
- NeuralAgent scores 3.8 out of 5 on the Cloudkart.ai rubric, which weighs actual utility, ease of use, pricing fairness, reliability and differentiation. Scores are set editorially and can never be bought.
Community reviews
No community reviews yet. Be the first to share how NeuralAgent works for you.
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