Launch HN: BitBoard (YC P25) – Analytics Workspace for Agents (bitboard.work)

47 points by arcb 20 hours ago

We’re Connor and Ambar from BitBoard (https://bitboard.work). BitBoard is an agentic analytics workspace. We give you the infrastructure and visualization layer to analyze data with AI.

Today, we’re launching dashboards that you and your agents can work on together. You can connect your coding agent or AI chat to BitBoard and build live reporting. Here’s a demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPl0K565a7c.

AI tools treat data analysis as ephemeral, making it hard to report or collaborate. Legacy BI tools weren’t intended for AI users, so they bolt on chatbots and can’t offer meaningful control to your agents. Software can now make far more of a business legible than BI ever could, but neither legacy BI nor chat bots are built to handle it.

Our original product was AI agents for administrative tasks in healthcare (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44237769), but customers kept pulling us toward their data analysis problems: queries scattered across disparate sources, spreadsheets floating everywhere. We kept building tooling for addressing that, and at a certain point those tools were becoming our product.

We ran into several problems. Agents made bad inferences because they had no context on the business. They couldn't be trusted to make decisions because nothing checked their work. And anything one agent or one person figured out was invisible to everyone else. In BitBoard, humans and agents interact with the same data primitives but get tools designed for their own work.

We’re building dashboards to make the human reading experience better. These dashboards progressively use intelligence - starting from code or SQL queries and leading to full embedded apps. Humans and agents will need to agree on methods to interpret data, so we’re letting both contribute to canonical sources, entities, and measures (using your favorite semantic model or ours). Every answer comes with provenance, and the same call with the same parameters returns the same number.

Looking ahead, these shared primitives let long-running agents operate inside a business, and we're building those agents too. An agent needs a measurable goal and a way to verify its work. BitBoard gives it both. The agent takes a problem like a metric drifting or a funnel leaking and figures out what to do next. Its work becomes datasets, dashboards, and traces that the team can observe and sign off on.

Technically, we’re building a collaboration engine with isomorphic updates for humans and AI, columnar analysis (we use DuckDB and Apache Arrow), grounding and verification infrastructure, and enabling long running tasks with agent containers and traces. For agentic work we’re big fans of applying LLM judgement to discover problems, and then generating deterministic software to automate them.

Try it out at https://app.bitboard.work. (We require an email so we can set up your account).

We’re excited about how data analysis and science can change in the age of LLMs, and welcome all your thoughts!

baetylus 17 hours ago

First, I love this concept and I think your demo is great! Collaboration with existing harnesses makes a ton of sense. Just had a conversation with some folks in the non-tech world raving about using Claude.

A few questions:

- How do you think about competing with ChatGPT Canvas or Anthropic's artifacts, when these are shareable, native experiences in their products where users already work?

- Is a "dashboard" limited to analytics or are you trying to expand it to include written reports?

Since teams are connecting MCPs like Granola, Slack, I imagine BitBoard would facilitate sharing demos, PRDs/briefs, or customer reports. This seems like a natural expansion and trivial functionally, so I'm wondering if that's part of the sell now or something you're looking at expanding into as you grow.

infakelife 17 hours ago

Thanks! Non-OP BitBoard cofounder here. Would love to hear your thoughts when you get a chance to check it out.

> How do you think about competing with ChatGPT Canvas or Anthropic's artifacts, when these are shareable, native experiences in their products where users already work?

The flexibility is amazing for static content and playing around with visuals, the experience is just more like a whiteboard than a dashboard. It's hard to do both well in the same place. For reporting I want live connections, consistent logic, the ability to trace provenance, and a more opinionated starting point for the UI.

We started with an extremely flexible surface but there are just a ton of things you don't want to leave up to the agent to implement and we gradually layered those in. It's no fun having to prompt the agent to expose a "view source" affordance, "run" button, or working data labels. But it's a lot of fun building whatever visualization you want and generating a dashboard without a billion clicks in some SQL-abstraction UI.

> Is a "dashboard" limited to analytics or are you trying to expand it to include written reports?

We weakly support written reports today (technically possible with markdown blocks in dashboards for commentary) but will do more to support them in the future for exactly the reasons you called out.

We actually built a more notebook-like artifact for this but cut it to focus on dashboards since they seemed to be a bigger pain point for users. One-off reports can be hit or miss with a chat or coding agent today but static reporting is at least supported with some effort. Live reporting with connection infrastructure, provenance, etc. is much harder to pull together.

sails 7 hours ago

> but customers kept pulling us toward their data analysis problems

I hear this all the time, I still don’t think it’s a good justification to build a BI tool, but I hope this time it is different.

Product looks cool! I’m hopeful that agents do actually unlock business analytics and we can move on from the BI concept

Edit: a rough explanation of why you get pulled towards data problems is that they are intractable symptoms of upstream process issues. Customer sees a capable startup and co-opts them into trying to solve their tarpit problems. Happens all the time!

rancar2 16 hours ago

I do exactly this (and more since my role is much broader and so is my approach) as a fractional head of product, data, and operations for multiple companies all in healthcare (fast growing self-funded to series D/IPOing soon). I saw your initial launch and felt validated by you all working on it, and now I’m further validated by the pivot. I have more work than I can handle, so I’m happy to share tips. You can find me via a bit of googling my HN handle or just adding a dot com to the end.

infakelife 15 hours ago

Appreciate the validation. Would be great to connect and exchange notes - will reach out directly.

dennis16384 16 hours ago

Nice, I recently did a similar but much simpler thing and open-sourced it under MIT, maybe some bits and pieced will be useful https://github.com/eatmydata-org/eatmydata

For example, MIT-licensed sqlite vector search extension.

Overall, I have a orchestrator - sql coder - js coder - dashboards, all without backend, running locally in the browser. It's mostly tested on small analysis and question answering with Gemini Flash Lite, and the overall target was speed from question to answer, including data sharing and waiting.

arcb 15 hours ago

There are a lot of cool and useful things in there. What are you most excited about?

dennis16384 15 hours ago

Fast response. I can upload Excel/csv and iterate under 10 seconds from question to result. Doing same thing in Claude with 10x less data takes 5 minutes.

arcb 15 hours ago

spmartin823 20 hours ago

Highly rec going after a specific vertical - healthcare might be the right spot given your experience. Why did you use DuckDB instead of CockroachDB/Snowflake?

arcb 20 hours ago

Our outreach is vertical-specific, and healthcare is indeed on the list! But what we learned working a vertical is that the primitives underneath (shared queries, permissions, caching, refresh semantics) repeat across industries.

We use DuckDB internally because we like its ergonomics - it's flexible, runs well in memory, manages a lot of file structures under the hood, but we do work with Snowflake (and Databricks and other warehouses) as well.

mritchie712 17 hours ago

Looks cool! It's a lot of work to get a full data stack set up and people are losing interest in stitching the pieces (ETL, warehouse, BI) together.

> Agents made bad inferences because they had no context on the business

We've been working on this since before the chatgpt launch.

We started with a semantic layer since there were already good open source options and LLMs at the time were good at writing the JSON (remember function calling?) to run a semantic query.

But as LLMs have gotten smarter and people wanted to do more data work in agents, we found we needed something more flexible, so we built an "Ontology" that lets you store all the terms you use in your company and connect them to the data points (e.g. tables, columns, metrics) that matter.

https://www.definite.app/blog/ontology-ai-analytics

straydusk 19 hours ago

Great concept. Had this idea myself recently.

arcb 19 hours ago

Thank you! If you try it out let us know how it goes!

htrp 18 hours ago

Is there a way to sign up without going through google oauth?

arcb 18 hours ago

Not at the moment but it's in the queue. If there's a sign up method that works better for you feel free to DM me.

BoorishBears 14 hours ago

How are you connecting to various data sources?

arcb 13 hours ago

We're offering secure connections to sources like SQL DBs, warehouses, file stores, and MCP/API sources like PostHog or Salesforce. Customers can choose to set up credentials in our key store. We also support directly dropping data into BitBoard (where we sync it to object storage).