Why Your Enterprise Computer Use Agent Is Still Costing You Millions in 2026
Your company is paying millions for 'AI automation.' Meanwhile your employees are still copy-pasting data between spreadsheets and CRMs. That is not automation. That is a crime against productivity.
The Computer Use Agent You Bought Is Broken
OpenAI launched Operator as the premier computer-use agent for enterprises. You bought it. You paid for it. It still fails 62% of desktop tasks. That is not a feature. That is a bug. Anthropic Computer Use is only slightly better at 73% success. These are the 'leaders' of AI automation and they can't even navigate a desktop reliably. Companies are deploying tools that break every time they try to do something real. IT teams are drowning in tickets from frustrated users whose agents click the wrong buttons and delete the wrong files. You are paying premium prices for software that makes your employees' lives harder, not easier.
Enterprise Automation Is Still A Nightmare
Gallup's 2026 workplace report found 80% of employees worldwide are not engaged at work. That is not a culture problem. That is an automation problem. Companies spend billions on RPA and AI agents and see almost nothing in return. Why? Because they keep buying tools that require hand-holding. They deploy agents that break when the UI changes. They build workflows that fail when someone uploads a non-standard file. The Larridin State of Enterprise AI 2025 report shows most organizations can't even measure the ROI of their AI investments. They are guessing. They are hoping. They are throwing money at problems they don't understand.
The Real Cost of Broken Automation
Every failed automation is a direct hit to your bottom line. Think about what happens when a computer-use agent can't complete a task: someone has to do it manually. Maybe twice. Once when the agent fails, and again when they fix what the agent broke. A single broken automation can waste hours of expensive engineering time. Multiply that by the dozens of automations you probably have running and you are looking at millions in wasted salary. Worse, broken automation creates distrust. Your employees stop trusting your tools. They stop trusting your leadership. They go back to doing things the old way because it's safer than whatever your shiny new AI is going to break this week. That is the death of innovation.
Coasty scored 82% on OSWorld, the only benchmark that actually tests AI agents on real desktop tasks. That is 20 percentage points ahead of Anthropic and 44 points ahead of OpenAI. This is not a small difference. This is the difference between an automation that actually works and one that is basically a glorified cursor-mover.
Why Coasty Actually Works
Most computer-use agents are designed to impress in demos. They work in controlled environments with perfect screenshots and predictable workflows. They fail the moment something goes wrong. Coasty is different. It's built to handle the messiness of real work. It works on real desktops, real browsers, and real terminals. It doesn't just call APIs. It actually clicks buttons, fills forms, and navigates complex applications like a human would. Companies can run Coasty on their own machines with BYOK support. They can spin up cloud VMs for parallel execution. They can deploy agent swarms to handle workloads that would take a human weeks to complete. Coasty isn't just a tool. It's a workforce multiplier. It's the first computer-use agent that enterprises can actually trust with mission-critical work.
Stop Buying Hype. Start Measuring Real Results.
If you're still evaluating computer-use agents, here is the only question that matters: how well does it perform on real tasks, under real conditions? OSWorld is the only benchmark that actually tests agents on open-ended desktop tasks. It measures whether an agent can complete real work, not just follow a script. Coasty's 82% score on OSWorld is not a marketing claim. It's a data point that puts every other computer-use agent to shame. You can try Coasty for free. You can bring your own keys. You can see for yourself whether an AI agent can actually do the work you need it to do. Don't bet your company's future on a vendor's marketing deck. Look at the numbers. Look at the results. Choose the computer-use agent that actually works.
2026 is the year you stop pretending AI automation is working. If your computer-use agents are failing more than half the time, you are not investing in the future. You are pouring money down a hole. Coasty is the computer-use agent that actually delivers. It's time to stop hoping and start working.