By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept

Your #1 guide to start a business and grow it the right way…

InSmartBudget

  • Home
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
    • Business Plans
    • Branding
    • Business Ideas
    • Business Models
    • Fundraising
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • More
    • Tax Preparation
    • Leadership
    • Marketing
Subscribe
Aa
InSmartBudgetInSmartBudget
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • Leadership
  • Marketing
  • Tax Preparation
Search
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
    • Business Plans
    • Branding
    • Business Ideas
    • Business Models
    • Fundraising
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • More
    • Tax Preparation
    • Leadership
    • Marketing
Made by ThemeRuby using the Foxiz theme Powered by WordPress
InSmartBudget > Startups > Meet The AI Agent With Multiple Personalities

Meet The AI Agent With Multiple Personalities

News Room By News Room April 22, 2025 4 Min Read
Share

In the coming years, agents are widely expected to take over more and more chores on behalf of humans, including using computers and smartphones. For now, though, they’re too error prone to be much use.

A new agent called S2, created by the startup Simular AI, combines frontier models with models specialized for using computers. The agent achieves state-of-the-art performance on tasks like using apps and manipulating files—and suggests that turning to different models in different situations may help agents advance.

“Computer-using agents are different from large language models and different from coding,” says Ang Li, cofounder and CEO of Simular. “It’s a different type of problem.”

In Simular’s approach, a powerful general-purpose AI model, like OpenAI’s GPT-4o or Anthropic’s Claude 3.7, is used to reason about how best to complete the task at hand—while smaller open source models step in for tasks like interpreting web pages.

Li, who was a researcher at Google DeepMind before founding Simular in 2023, explains that large language models excel at planning but aren’t as good at recognizing the elements of a graphical user interface.

S2 is designed to learn from experience with an external memory module that records actions and user feedback and uses those recordings to improve future actions.

On particularly complex tasks, S2 performs better than any other model on OSWorld, a benchmark that measures an agent’s ability to use a computer operating system.

For example, S2 can complete 34.5 percent of tasks that involve 50 steps, beating OpenAI’s Operator, which can complete 32 percent. Similarly, S2 scores 50 percent on AndroidWorld, a benchmark for smartphone-using agents, while the next best agent scores 46 percent.

Victor Zhong, a computer scientist at the University of Waterloo in Canada and one of the creators of OSWorld, believes that future big AI models may incorporate training data that helps them understand the visual world and make sense of graphical user interfaces.

“This will help agents navigate GUIs with much higher precision,” Zhong says. “I think in the meantime, before such fundamental breakthroughs, state-of-the-art systems will resemble Simular in that they combine multiple models to patch the limitations of single models.”

To prepare for this column, I used Simular to book flights and scour Amazon for deals, and it seemed better than some of the open source agents I tried last year, including AutoGen and vimGPT.

But even the smartest AI agents are, it seems, still troubled by edge cases and occasionally exhibit odd behavior. In one instance, when I asked S2 to help find contact information for the researchers behind OSWorld, the agent got stuck in a loop hopping between the project page and the login for OSWorld’s Discord.

OSWorld’s benchmarks show why agents remain more hype than reality for now. While humans can complete 72 percent of OSWorld tasks, agents are foiled 38 percent of the time on complex tasks. That said, when the benchmark was introduced in April 2024, the best agent could complete only 12 percent of the tasks.

Read the full article here

News Room April 22, 2025 April 22, 2025
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Previous Article Franchising Is Getting Younger — Here’s What’s Changed
Next Article How to Avoid the Perils of Short-Term Thinking For Long-Term Success
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Wake up with our popular morning roundup of the day's top startup and business stories

Stay Updated

Get the latest headlines, discounts for the military community, and guides to maximizing your benefits
Subscribe

Top Picks

Why Steve Aoki is Backing Brain-Boosting Gum Brand
September 16, 2025
How Morning Brew’s CEO Succeeds in a Noisy Media Landscape
September 16, 2025
OpenAI Ramps Up Robotics Work in Race Toward AGI
September 16, 2025
Why 67% of Wealthy People Do This Every Morning
September 16, 2025
Coworking with Ashley Shaffer
September 16, 2025

You Might Also Like

OpenAI Ramps Up Robotics Work in Race Toward AGI

Startups

The Doomers Who Insist AI Will Kill Us All

Startups

Inside the Man vs. Machine Hackathon

Startups

The Unexpected Winners of Trump’s Trade War

Startups

© 2023 InSmartBudget. All Rights Reserved.

Helpful Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Resources

  • Start A Business
  • Funding
  • Growing a Business
  • Leadership
  • Marketing

Popuplar

Use This Blueprint to Turn Prospects Into Customers For Life
How to Build a Business That Thrives in Tough Economic Times
Dry Skin Sparked This Eight-Figure Men’s Skincare Brand

We provide daily business and startup news, benefits information, and how to grow your small business, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?