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Roger

Roger provides AI-guided, step-by-step tours through software screens, helping you learn by doing and flag incorrect steps for correction.

Roger

What is Roger?

Roger is an AI-guided software learning tool that provides step-by-step tours through software interfaces. Instead of passively watching, the core idea is to help you learn by doing: Roger observes what you have on your screen, then plans and guides the next steps to complete tasks.

The product is designed for situations where you need help figuring out how to use an application—especially when tasks are procedural and depend on what’s currently visible in the interface.

Key Features

  • AI-guided, step-by-step walkthroughs: Roger “walk[s] you through any software step by step,” aiming to guide users through actions in the order needed to complete a task.
  • Screen understanding to plan next actions: Roger uses AI to “understand your screen and plan steps,” so guidance is based on what you’re currently seeing.
  • Flagging when a step doesn’t look right: If a step “doesn’t look right,” you can flag it to correct the guidance.
  • Guidance tailored to the workflow you’re attempting: Because Roger plans steps based on your current screen state, it can follow along with the task you’re working on rather than giving only generic instructions.

How to Use Roger

  1. Start the guided tour for the software you want to learn.
  2. Use the interface while Roger observes your screen and provides the next step(s).
  3. Follow the guided instructions as you work through your task.
  4. If a step appears incorrect for your current state, flag it and continue; Roger’s guidance is intended to be corrected based on your feedback.

Use Cases

  • Learning a new software UI quickly: When you’re unfamiliar with a tool, Roger can guide you through key actions step by step so you can learn the workflow directly in the application.
  • Completing a specific task with procedural steps: If your goal is to finish a defined job inside an app, Roger’s walkthrough format helps you proceed in order.
  • Troubleshooting when steps don’t match your screen: If the guide doesn’t align with what you see, you can flag the step and adjust the guidance.
  • Multi-screen or multi-stage workflows: For tasks that “span multiple software” (as implied by the FAQ), Roger is presented as able to help when your work moves across tools.

FAQ

  • What happens if Roger gets a step wrong? Roger uses AI to understand your screen and plan steps, but it “is not perfect every time.” If a step doesn’t look right, you can flag it, and the site states they “promise it will never be wrong again, ever.”

  • Does Roger work with any software? The FAQ includes this question, but the provided content does not include an explicit answer. The page suggests Roger is meant to guide “any software,” but the compatibility details are not shown in the excerpt.

  • Can Roger guide me through tasks that span multiple software? The FAQ includes this question, but the excerpt does not provide the actual answer.

  • Is my data safe with Roger? The FAQ includes this question, but the excerpt does not provide any information about data safety.

Alternatives

  • Static how-to guides (articles, screenshots, documentation): Helpful for reference, but they don’t adapt to what you see on your screen in real time and typically require you to interpret steps yourself.
  • Video tutorials: These can show end-to-end workflows, but they’re often passive and may not guide you interactively through your specific interface state.
  • In-app walkthroughs and onboarding tools: Useful for product onboarding inside a specific app, but they may be limited to a particular product’s UI rather than “any software.”
  • AI chat assistants for software help: Chat-based answers can provide guidance, but they may be less structured than step-by-step tours tied to what’s currently on your screen.