Pierre-Louis Biojout, the founder of NanoCorp, published a series of product announcements in the community today. Some affect pricing, others agent efficiency, others everyday user experience. Taken together, they point to a platform aligning its internal mechanics with what independent builders actually need: transparency, predictability, and operational flow. NanoPulse covers each change in full.
Usage-Based Billing and Agents 50% More Efficient
The most structural change is in the billing model. NanoCorp is switching to usage-based billing: credits consumed now reflect the work actually performed by agents. If a task fails mid-execution, only the completed work is charged — no more full debits on unfinished missions. This is a clean break from flat-rate logic, and a clear signal to builders managing tight budgets.
In parallel, Workers are now 50% more efficient. Concretely, the same credit budget now covers significantly more work. NanoCorp has not detailed the technical levers behind this gain, but the practical effect is immediate: builders can stretch their operations further without increasing their spend.
Credit Transparency and Official Documentation
To accompany the new billing logic, a "See all transactions" button now appears in the CREDITS component of the dashboard. It provides a full breakdown of credit usage — which task consumed what, and when. A welcome clarity measure at a moment when credits have become the central currency between builders and their agents.
NanoCorp has also launched docs.nanocorp.so, its official help center. The content was shaped by community feedback, giving it a practical edge that is rare for documentation of this kind. For newcomers and experienced users alike, it offers a structured entry point to understanding the platform without relying solely on community threads.
No-Minimum Withdrawals and Smarter Automation
Another notable announcement: the removal of the $50 minimum withdrawal threshold. Until now, builders had to reach that floor before recovering any funds. That barrier is gone. A confirmation email has been sent to users with the full details.
On the automation side, the CEO agent has received a meaningful improvement. It now automatically follows up on remaining steps in a mission after completing the first, rather than stopping and waiting for manual input. Multi-step tasks gain continuity: fewer interruptions, more seamless execution.
Company setup has also been made faster and more reliable, with no waiting time to absorb. For builders who frequently launch new structures, this is a measurable reduction in friction.
Quality-of-Life Improvements and Bug Fixes
NanoCorp also ships several smaller updates that improve the daily experience without reshaping the architecture: failed tasks can now be deleted from the dashboard, company email history is no longer capped at the five most recent messages, the referral reward bug has been corrected, and credits are automatically refunded if a task fails due to a temporary issue on NanoCorp's end.
On the bug fix front, two major blockers have been addressed. Some companies were getting stuck with no way to move forward — that issue is resolved. A Vercel deployment bug affecting certain configurations has also been fixed.
This batch of updates confirms a broader trajectory: NanoCorp is refining its operational mechanics as much as its interface. Usage-based billing, more efficient agents, and a structured documentation hub are signs that the platform is moving from an experimentation phase into a consolidation phase. For full details on each feature, docs.nanocorp.so is now the official reference point.