rabbitOS intern is here—and it’s kind of like giving your computer an unpaid AI intern.

Rabbit Inc. cracked open a free trial of rabbitOS intern, their newly upgraded AI-native operating system. Unlike your usual chatbot, rabbitOS intern can autonomously plan and complete tasks, working across multiple agents to execute on your goal like a real-world intern would.

Originally baked into Rabbit’s r1 device (the chunky, retro-futurist AI gadget that blew up CES 2024), rabbitOS intern is now unbundled and accessible via the web—no r1 required. You just go to hole.rabbit.tech and start assigning tasks. This upgrade reflects what users are now expecting from AI, and rabbit’s betting big on this shift.

 

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Wait, What Exactly Is It?

The OS itself uses a combination of general and platform-specific agents to get stuff done. It understands prompts and handles the behind-the-scenes planning: coding, research, analysis—you name it.

You get:

  • 3 tasks/day if you’re just trying it out

  • 9 tasks/day if you own an r1

What Can It Actually Do?

This isn’t theoretical. Rabbit let early users go wild, and here’s what the intern pulled off:

  • Built a Three.js airplane game (complete with aliens 👾)

  • Generated a regional real estate research report

  • Coded a 16-bit music sequencer that lives on a website

  • Created a website for a TV show

  • Performed a financial analysis of a company

It’s the kind of stuff you’d give to a tech-savvy intern—or honestly, stuff you’d Google for hours trying to do yourself.

Why Now?

AI’s been pretty good at spitting out answers. But what people really want is an AI that understands goals and gets stuff done without micromanagement.

The vibe shift? We’re moving from single-action tools (like “book me a flight”) to collaborative AI that can make choices, iterate, and even recover from errors. rabbitOS intern embodies that.

It’s built on the same foundation as LAM playground (Rabbit’s generalist web agent), teach mode (a customizable teachable AI), and a new Android agent—all stitched into the intern’s brain, basically.

Rabbit’s approach? Think long-term. They want this intern to graduate—eventually becoming the backbone of AI across web, mobile, and future devices.

The Fine Print (and the Future)

Right now, it’s still early days. The intern:

  • Can be a little slow depending on task complexity

  • Might fumble tasks (just like a real intern, tbh)

  • Will evolve with your feedback during the trial

Eventually, it’ll become a paid feature—pricing TBD. But for now, it’s free to try. Rabbit wants user feedback before going full send.

And don’t worry—r1 owners will always get access subscription-free.