he three models that H has released are called Runner H, Tester H, and Surfer H.
H said that the three products reflect the company’s vision for a “trusted, action-oriented AI that delivers task execution beyond traditional chatbots”.
It claims that it achieves a 92.2 per cent success rate while reducing costs by up to 5.5 times against competitors such as OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google.
Surfer H allows you to surf the web and navigate browser environments, and the company claims the model achieved a 92.2 per cent task completion accuracy on the WebVoyager benchmark at $0.13 (€0.11) per task.
This is much cheaper than competitors, such as OpenAI’s Operator agent, which costs $200 (€175) per month for its Pro subscription plan.
“It’s really like almost an agent acting on your behalf, using planning to visual capabilities to recognise interfaces, clicking, scrolling, acting, fetching information, and so on,” Kantor said.
Tester H is the final new model, which is built more for enterprise use with one of the big things it can do being software testing.
But it can also do things such as smart email replies. You can ask the agent to read your recent emails, and it can draft template answers. But the agent will not hit send; only the human can do this.
H said that the three products reflect the company’s vision for a “trusted, action-oriented AI that delivers task execution beyond traditional chatbots”.
All the models are trained on synthetic data, which means it uses artificially generated data designed to mimic real-world data, allowing the company to meet Europe’s GDPR rules on data protection.
According to Kantor, he personally uses H’s AI models for the interconnection between tools such as emails and documents to prepare information, such as for billing or drafting emails.
The ‘clear’ agentic vision
H Company created a buzz when it launched last year. Kantor was a university professor at Stanford while the start-up’s other co-founders came from DeepMind.
Meanwhile, investment came from LVMH’s CEO Bernard Arnault, Iliad founder Xavier Niel, Amazon, Samsung, and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, among others.
But just several months after launch, three of the co-founders – Daan Wierstra, Karl Tuyls, and Julien Perolat – quit due to “operational differences,” the company said in a LinkedIn post.