Agents should have access to every system. Introducing Integuru: generate fast, reliable APIs for any platform⚡️
API calls complete in ~3 seconds with 99.9%+ success.
No browsers or RPA. No data caching needed. With auth support.
@InteguruAI is free to use. Thread below.
Stop watching your AI agents fail at 2 AM. 🚨
Browser automation isn't automation. It’s just a slower way to break things.
Most "API builders" still rely on RPA or headless browsers. That means:
↳ 60-second load times.
↳ Breaking the second a UI button moves 2px.
↳ Waking up to failed workflows.
There is a better way. And it launched today.
@InteguruAI just killed the browser entirely.
Instead of clicking buttons like a slow human, it reverse-engineers the backend directly. Direct HTTP requests. No UI. No fluff.
The result?
✅ ~3 second response latency (down from minutes).
✅ 99.9%+ success rate (not 70%).
✅ Auto-healing APIs (you sleep tonight).
From a URL to a production-ready API in minutes.
This isn't for hobbyists. This is for:
→ Founders tired of brittle scrapers.
→ Devs building AI agents that actually work.
→ Teams processing 1M+ calls/month (they already do).
Stop automating the screen. Start automating the source.
👉 Try it free here: https://t.co/X4cMWMjZrA
@InteguruAI is live on ProductHunt right now:
https://t.co/NgdxdsvHeg
♻️ Repost if you’re done fixing broken scrapers.
—
#API #ArtificialIntelligence #WebDev #Integuru #YC
.@InteguruAI has solved EHR integrations.
Gatekeeping, FHIR gaps, and HL7 one-offs have caused enough damage. Healthcare companies can now integrate with any EHR. With reliability, low latency, and high throughput.
No more filtering hospitals and clinics by their systems. Serve any provider, regardless of the EHR they use.
eClinicalWorks is one of the most popular outpatient EHRs, yet it still lacks a sufficient API. Today, that changes.
Integuru now powers read and write functionalities on eCW through a battle-tested API that healthcare software leaders already use. If you’re building on top of eCW and need reliable access, reach out.
Today is a bittersweet day... We've officially outgrown our original 1990s-style website. I know many people liked that site, but we're now serving larger enterprises that need more info. (Yea, we gave in 😂)
The old site served us well. It's where we launched our v0 agent, which redefined what's possible for APIs. We're now cooking up some new things, and updates will follow.
You can see the new site, including new customers and industries we featured, via the link in comments.
Why do we care so much about APIs?
Because the internet isn't truly interconnected. Humans can use any tool, but machines can't. That's the bottleneck for automation.
Teams resort to browser agents, but it's like driving a race car in first gear. Forcing machines through human UIs is a waste of potential.
We're giving AI programmatic access to every platform, without sacrificing reliability or latency.
Exciting news for proptech AI companies 🏠: We have greatly expanded the AppFolio API. There are now even more features available for you to support property management firms.
As usual, we welcome and accept other feature and platform requests.
It's the holiday season, and we're approaching 2 years of building @InteguruAI. I reflected on this journey and hope these lessons are useful to others.
1. Momentum compounds with time and effort.
@ycombinator partners told our batch that companies see a significant increase in the likelihood of success after making it past 2 years. As we approach that milestone, I’m starting to see our hard work pay off (though we still have much work to do!). Startup momentum occurs when you stay alive and continue to engage with customers. Every line of code and every minute with customers adds to your expertise and reputation. Don't die and keep moving.
2. Startups are built by doing, not by thinking.
Startup progress favors doers far more than thinkers. This may be why nerds often have a better time building startups on average. People may assume that startups are planned from whiteboarding sessions. In reality, many important insights are gathered during execution. We listen to customers and push our engineering. Along the way, we gain knowledge we wouldn't have gained without real work. For founders who're just starting or pivoting, I recommend committing real time and energy into one direction and diving deep.
3. Your cofounder relationship should be a top priority.
Some say cofounder relationships are like a marriage. I wouldn't know whether this is true because I haven't married. But I can attest that a great cofounder relationship makes the startup a shared passion, while I've seen poor ones turn the experience into hell. Seek uncomfortable and radically honest communication. Hold each other's best interests at heart. Nurture this relationship, and it'll propel your startup to new heights.
4. FOMO isn't going to help anyone.
Great artists steal, but it doesn't mean they steal everything. Others' decisions and actions shouldn't be driving forces for your own. Pay less attention to TechCrunch articles and more to customers. This takes discipline, but true insights root from focus and deep trust in the right process.
5. Remember that building startups is a privilege.
Building a startup is hard, but our lives could be much worse. Remembering that we're privileged to pursue our visions for the world puts our challenges in context. I try to remind myself and my team to cherish the good and the bad. Since we're dedicating years of our lives to something, let's enjoy and feel grateful that we're in a position to do so.