Kunal Kushwaha / X (Kunal Kushwaha)
Indian-origin tech educator Kunal Kushwaha has reviewed a newly launched artificial intelligence research tool, comparing its output with that of commonly used AI platforms and pointing to differences in how research results are generated and presented.
The tool called Superagent, has been developed by Airtable, a US-based company best known for its cloud platform that allows teams to build databases and internal tools without extensive coding. The product was announced as a standalone offering separate from Airtable’s core no-code workflow platform.
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This is the best AI tool I have seen so far this year, and everyone can use it. Normally, when you research a topic using tools like Perplexity, Gemini, or ChatGPT, they just give you a wall of text.
— Kunal Kushwaha (@kunalstwt) January 29, 2026
Try @superagent, a newly launched product by @airtable. It literally builds you… pic.twitter.com/FtKXZ2Kk6k
In a post on X, Kushwaha said the tool produces interactive research reports from a single prompt, rather than returning long blocks of text.
He compared the output with tools such as Gemini and Perplexity, which he said typically generate text-heavy responses, and noted that the new system organises information through clickable sections, charts and visualisations designed for direct use in presentations and reports.
In an accompanying video, Kushwaha demonstrated how the same research query produced different results across platforms.
While conventional tools returned extensive written explanations, the new tool generated a structured report divided into multiple sections, including market context, learning pathways and comparative metrics, presented in an interactive format.
Kushwaha said the system works by breaking a user’s prompt into smaller tasks handled by multiple specialised AI agents operating in parallel.
According to him, these agents collect information from various sources, synthesise the material and include citations in the final output. He added that the reports remain available as reusable assets and can be shared through unique web links.
The post also noted that users can upload their own data and run multiple tasks at the same time.
Airtable announced the launch of the tool on Jan. 27,, describing it as the company’s first product offered independently of its main platform in its 13-year history. The company said the tool is designed to coordinate multiple AI agents to handle complex research tasks and produce presentation-ready outputs rather than conversational summaries.
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