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Documentation platform for publishing accurate, AI-ready docs sites, with Git sync and an MCP server for AI tools.
Jupyter-native AI agent that remembers a data project across sessions and reads chart/plot outputs, not just code.
Google's open-source TypeScript framework for building scalable web apps, featuring signals, reactivity and first-party tooling.
Low-code integration platform for connecting thousands of APIs into workflows and AI agents, including an MCP tool server.
No public pricing
Free trial available
No public pricing
No public pricing
No public pricing
- ✦Publish structured documentation sites
- ✦Git sync for docs-as-code workflows
- ✦AI setup agent to build and import docs
- ✦GitBook MCP server for AI access
- ✦Enterprise controls
- ✦Free tier to start
- ✦Cross-session project memory recalling prior decisions and state
- ✦Autonomous execution of long, multi-step notebook tasks
- ✦Reads cell outputs (plots, tables, metrics), not just code
- ✦In-notebook cell-level assistance and error fixing
- ✦Installs directly into existing JupyterLab via pip, no new editor
- ✦Concept explanations with runnable example cells
- ✦Signals-based fine-grained reactivity
- ✦Built-in control flow and deferrable views
- ✦Server-side rendering and hydration
- ✦First-party routing, forms and dependency injection
- ✦AI-forward tooling and MCP resources
- ✦In-browser tutorials and playground
- ✦Visual and code-based workflow builder
- ✦Prebuilt AI agent builder and deployment
- ✦Managed authentication across thousands of apps
- ✦MCP server exposing integrations as agent tools
- ✦Scheduled and event-triggered workflows
- ✦Connect SDK for embedding integrations into other products
- →Publish product and API documentation
- →Maintain docs-as-code with Git sync
- →Make docs consumable by AI assistants
- →Import existing docs into a hosted site
- →Data scientists running multi-week model iteration projects
- →Domain experts (e.g. risk/fintech) who know the problem but not deep Python
- →Researchers wanting an agent that remembers project context across days
- →Analysts needing help understanding unfamiliar algorithms or libraries
- →Building scalable single-page apps
- →Enterprise web application development
- →Performance-critical front ends
- →Learning modern web development
- →Building AI agents that call external APIs and tools
- →Automating cross-app workflows such as Slack, Gmail, or Sheets notifications
- →Embedding third-party integrations into a SaaS product
- →Prototyping event-driven automations without heavy infrastructure