The one-sentence version
Mira is a desktop web browser you install — like a consumer browser — but built for work inside business apps, with security policy and AI assistance built into the browser itself. Your teams use it to open the SaaS tools they already use (CRM, helpdesk, email, dashboards, internal portals), and your IT and security people get control and visibility they can't get from a normal browser.
What Mira is — and isn't
It's easy to mis-file Mira, so here's the plain version:
- It is a standalone browser application for Windows, macOS and Linux. You download and install it.
- It is not a browser extension you bolt onto a consumer browser. The governance and AI live in the core, where an extension can't be bypassed or removed by the user.
- It is not a virtual desktop (VDI) or a remote-desktop stream. There's no server rendering your screen — Mira runs locally and is fast.
- It is not a VPN client. Instead it includes identity-aware access so people reach only the apps they're allowed to, without a network tunnel.
- It is not a replacement for your everyday personal browsing. It's the controlled place your work happens.
Why a separate browser at all?
Almost all business work now happens in the browser — CRM, ticketing, spreadsheets, admin portals, email, documentation, dashboards and AI tools. Standard browsers were designed for general web access, not for structured business workflows, and they give IT very little control over what happens inside a tab.
That creates three problems Mira is built to solve: people waste time switching between a dozen tabs; sensitive company data leaks through downloads, copy-paste and ungoverned AI tools; and security teams have almost no visibility into what's happening at the browser layer. Mira makes the browser itself the place where productivity, AI and control come together.
What it does, in everyday terms
Six things, on one screen:
- Organizes the apps each role uses into a tidy workspace, so people aren't hunting through bookmarks.
- Assists with an AI side panel that can read the tabs you've opened and summarize, compare or pull out structured data.
- Governs what can happen — downloads, uploads, copy-paste, which sites open — with rules set centrally by IT.
- Automates repetitive web tasks with AI agents that ask for approval before anything risky.
- Protects data by redacting sensitive information before it's ever sent to an AI provider, and encrypting anything stored locally.
- Audits activity so admins can see usage and risk — without logging the actual content of people's work by default.
Who it's for
Mira is configured per industry and role. The first proven package is for healthcare — a governed clinical browser for doctors. The same core is packaged for banking and finance, security teams, call centers and BPOs, government, and field and remote/BYOD workers. If your teams live inside SaaS all day and you care about control, it probably fits.
How you'd get started
Most teams begin with a small, fixed-scope pilot: you choose a department, the apps they're allowed to use, the controls you want, and the audit fields you need. We help you pass security review early, prove value, then expand team by team. There's a free Starter trial, and paid tiers start at a fraction of comparable enterprise browsers — see pricing.
Want this applied to your stack? Book a 30-minute walkthrough and we'll show Mira on your real SaaS apps — or see pricing.