id
stringclasses 5
values | submission_date
stringdate 2025-07-09 00:00:00
2025-07-18 00:00:00
| video_url
video | duration_ms
int32 1.94M
4.24M
| version
stringclasses 1
value | input_metadata
stringclasses 5
values | task_description
stringclasses 5
values | quest_type
stringclasses 3
values | profession
stringclasses 2
values | synthetically_generated_instruction
stringclasses 5
values | synthetically_generated_thought_metadata
stringclasses 0
values |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
54781db7-816a-4e4b-875c-a5a5c2879cf4
|
2025-07-17
| 2,193,130 |
0.1
|
https://pango-service-production.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/finalized/54781db7-816a-4e4b-875c-a5a5c2879cf4/actions_v2.json
|
I created a home renovation budget spreadsheet. At the top there is a status section, displaying important information such as funds available, funds used and funds remaining. Amounts are calculated using formulas. The entire spreadsheet is formatted with a cyan theme and unique fonts to make it easier on the eye. A bar graph is presented to show the funds remaining vs funds used. Furthermore, lines are added in the status section to make it easier to read. Cells have been formatted to have the dollar sign at the left and the amount at the right. A larger section is provided for users to track items, the date they were purchased, categories, write extra notes, their prices and the net cost compared to how much was budgeted for. There are filters available in this section so users can sort alphabetically or numerically. In addition, a pie chart is present for users to compare the prices of goods and services.
|
sheets
|
Student
|
Create a home renovation budget spreadsheet in Google Sheets with the following specifications:\n\n1. **Status Section**: \n - Place this section at the top of the spreadsheet.\n - Include the following fields: "Funds Available", "Funds Used", and "Funds Remaining".\n - Use formulas to calculate the amounts for each field.\n - Add lines to separate each field for better readability.\n - Format the cells to display the dollar sign on the left and the amount on the right.\n\n2. **Formatting**:\n - Apply a cyan theme across the entire spreadsheet.\n - Use unique fonts to enhance readability and aesthetics.\n\n3. **Graphs and Charts**:\n - Insert a bar graph to visually represent "Funds Remaining" versus "Funds Used".\n - Add a pie chart to compare the prices of goods and services.\n\n4. **Item Tracking Section**:\n - Create a larger section for users to track renovation items.\n - Include columns for "Item", "Date Purchased", "Category", "Notes", "Budgeted Price", "Actual Cost", and "Net Cost Difference".\n - Implement filters in this section to allow users to sort items alphabetically or numerically.\n\n5. **Data Entry**:\n - Ensure that the "Date Purchased" column is formatted to accept date entries.\n - Allow users to input detailed notes and categorize each item for better organization.\n\n6. **Final Touches**:\n - Ensure all data entries and calculations are accurate and reflect the intended budget management.\n - Review the spreadsheet for consistency in formatting and functionality.\n\nThis setup will provide a comprehensive tool for managing and visualizing a home renovation budget effectively.
| null |
|
038970bb-c132-4219-80f7-45a275d86650
|
2025-07-18
| 3,849,044 |
0.1
|
https://pango-service-production.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/finalized/038970bb-c132-4219-80f7-45a275d86650/actions_v2.json
|
So I created a event flyer, I chose a music festival. I started with a vibrant orange background to evoke energy and excitement. I placed a striking image of a stylish individual as the focal point and surrounded them by bold typograph. The event details were prominently displayed in clean, modern fonts. Circular patterns and geometric shapes added dynamic visual interest, while contrasting purple accents created balance. The overall design is bold, eye catching and reflective of the festivals lively atmosphere.
|
canva
|
Student
|
Create an event flyer in Canva for a music festival. Follow these steps to achieve the desired design:\n\n1. **Background**: Set a vibrant orange background to evoke energy and excitement.\n\n2. **Main Image**: Place a striking image of a stylish individual as the focal point of the flyer.\n\n3. **Typography**: Surround the main image with bold typography. Use clean, modern fonts to prominently display the event details.\n\n4. **Visual Elements**: Add circular patterns and geometric shapes to create dynamic visual interest.\n\n5. **Color Accents**: Use contrasting purple accents to create balance within the design.\n\n6. **Overall Design**: Ensure the design is bold, eye-catching, and reflective of the festival's lively atmosphere.\n\nThis flyer should capture the essence of a vibrant music festival, using the specified elements to create an engaging and visually appealing design.
| null |
|
bc50d07a-d11a-4c9c-9c5a-e5fdb6e85b5f
|
2025-07-15
| 2,300,654 |
0.1
|
https://pango-service-production.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/finalized/bc50d07a-d11a-4c9c-9c5a-e5fdb6e85b5f/actions_v2.json
|
I made a workout routine on google slides. I chose a light theme from the available selections and on the title page is the name of the workout program. The workout program is split into four parts separated by slides, corresponding to a day of exercising. I added a visual example by using GIFs for each exercises. Each day consists of six exercises and those exercises vary between the days. For the first day, it is an upper body day that focuses on the chest. For the second day, it is a lower body day, focusing on the quad muscles. For the third day, it is another upper body day but now focused on the back muscles. And for the last day, it is another lower body day, focusing on the hamstrings.\n
|
slides
|
Student
|
Create a workout routine presentation using Google Slides. Follow these steps to recreate the workout program:\n\n1. **Theme Selection**: \n - Open Google Slides and select a light theme from the available options.\n\n2. **Title Slide**:\n - Create a title slide with the name of the workout program. You can use "Upper/Lower Workout Split" as the title.\n\n3. **Workout Structure**:\n - The workout program is divided into four parts, each corresponding to a day of exercise. Create a separate slide for each day.\n\n4. **Day 1 - Upper Body (Chest Focus)**:\n - Title the slide "Upper Day 1 (Chest Biased)".\n - List six exercises focusing on the chest. Include visual examples using GIFs for each exercise.\n - Example exercises: Incline Press, Pec Dec, Chest Fly.\n - For each exercise, specify the sets and reps, e.g., "2 sets of 4-8 reps".\n\n5. **Day 2 - Lower Body (Quad Focus)**:\n - Title the slide "Lower Day A (Quad Biased)".\n - List six exercises focusing on the quads. Include visual examples using GIFs for each exercise.\n - Example exercises: Squats, Leg Extensions.\n - For each exercise, specify the sets and reps, e.g., "2 sets of 4-8 reps".\n\n6. **Day 3 - Upper Body (Back Focus)**:\n - Title the slide "Upper Day B (Back Biased)".\n - List six exercises focusing on the back. Include visual examples using GIFs for each exercise.\n - Example exercises: Lat Pulldown, Chest Supported Row.\n - For each exercise, specify the sets and reps, e.g., "2 sets of 4-8 reps".\n\n7. **Day 4 - Lower Body (Hamstring Focus)**:\n - Title the slide "Lower Day B (Hamstring Biased)".\n - List six exercises focusing on the hamstrings. Include visual examples using GIFs for each exercise.\n - Example exercises: Romanian Deadlift, Leg Curls.\n - For each exercise, specify the sets and reps, e.g., "2 sets of 4-8 reps".\n\n8. **Visuals**:\n - Ensure each exercise has a corresponding GIF to demonstrate the movement.\n\n9. **Final Review**:\n - Review each slide to ensure all exercises are correctly listed with the appropriate sets and reps.\n - Check that all GIFs are properly embedded and functioning.\n\nThis presentation will provide a comprehensive guide to a four-day workout routine, alternating between upper and lower body focus, with specific attention to different muscle groups each day.
| null |
|
a92acbdb-d161-4a9b-95d4-4e11ae3b991f
|
2025-07-09
| 1,936,464 |
0.1
|
https://pango-service-production.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/finalized/a92acbdb-d161-4a9b-95d4-4e11ae3b991f/actions_v2.json
|
Design a hiring flyer with 4 open position and email info.
|
canva
|
Designer
|
Design a hiring flyer in Canva that lists 4 open positions along with a contact email address for applicants. The layout should be clear and professional, highlighting the job titles and including a call-to-action for candidates to apply.
| null |
|
ee266eed-48c1-4b4e-bc02-19c17e92f0d7
|
2025-07-16
| 4,237,998 |
0.1
|
https://pango-service-production.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/finalized/ee266eed-48c1-4b4e-bc02-19c17e92f0d7/actions_v2.json
|
Created Grocery Shopping Comparison Spread Sheet. Two pages were made for this. Page 1 "Grocery Data" contained a database which included basic information about each potential item, and the cost of each unit across 4 major retailers. The price of each item across each retailer is compared and then the sections for Best Value, 2nd Best, and 3rd Best are filled out based on the cheapest and sequentially best options. Based of the information for items put into this database, an individual can then use Page 2 "Grocery list" to create a shopping list where they simply put in the item they are after and the quantity of said item. Using various formulas, the category, unit, best store, best unit cost, total, savings are all calculated from the data in "Grocery Data". The Grocery List subtotal is also calculated and the total savings made when compared to the worst possible option of retailer for the specific items
|
sheets
|
Student
|
Create a Grocery Shopping Comparison Spreadsheet in Google Sheets with two sheets: "Grocery Data" and "Grocery List".\n\n1. **Grocery Data Sheet:**\n - Create columns for "Item Name", "Category", "Unit", and the names of four major retailers (e.g., Freshmart, Grubhub, Coles, Woolworths).\n - Add columns for "Best Store", "Best Unit Cost", "2nd Best", "3rd Best", and "Savings".\n - Populate the "Item Name" column with items such as Bread, Milk, Vitamin C, Ketchup, Detergent, Chicken, Tissue, Ice Cream, Muffins, Pepper, Juice, Cheese, Protein Bar, Soy Sauce, Air Freshener, Beef, Napkins, Frozen Pizza, Bagels, Garlic Powder, Lemonade, and Yogurt.\n - Enter unit prices for each item across the retailers.\n - Use formulas to determine the "Best Store" and "Best Unit Cost" by finding the minimum price across the retailers for each item.\n - Calculate "2nd Best" and "3rd Best" using the `LARGE` function to find the second and third lowest prices.\n - Calculate "Savings" by comparing the best price to the worst price and multiplying by the quantity.\n\n2. **Grocery List Sheet:**\n - Create columns for "No.", "Item", "Quantity", "Category", "Unit", "Best Store", "Best Unit Cost", "Total", and "Savings".\n - Use data validation or a dropdown list for the "Item" column to select items from the "Grocery Data" sheet.\n - Use VLOOKUP or INDEX-MATCH formulas to automatically fill in "Category", "Unit", "Best Store", and "Best Unit Cost" based on the selected item.\n - Calculate "Total" by multiplying "Best Unit Cost" by "Quantity".\n - Calculate "Savings" by comparing the total cost using the best price to the total cost using the worst price.\n - Add a formula to calculate the "Grocery List Total" and "Total Savings" at the bottom of the list.\n\nEnsure all formulas are correctly linked between the two sheets to dynamically update as data is entered or changed.
| null |
Pango Sample: Real-World Computer Use Agent Training Data
Pango represents Productivity Applications with Natural GUI Observations and trajectories.
Dataset Description
This dataset contains authentic computer interaction data collected from users performing real work tasks in productivity applications. The data was collected through Pango, a crowdsourced platform where users are compensated for contributing their natural computer interactions during actual work sessions.
Motivation
Current Computer Use Agent (CUA) training datasets face several limitations:
- Scale constraints: Existing datasets like Mind2Web (2,350 tasks), GUI-World (12,000 videos), and OSWorld (369 tasks) provide limited coverage
- Artificial contexts: Most demonstrations are scripted rather than authentic work sessions
- Distribution gaps: Performance drops significantly when agents encounter interfaces outside their training distribution
- Missing error patterns: Academic datasets typically exclude "failed" interactions, removing important recovery behaviors
This dataset addresses these limitations by capturing real users performing genuine work tasks, providing natural interaction patterns, error recovery sequences, and diverse problem-solving approaches.
Data Collection Methodology
Data is collected through a Chrome extension that records user interactions during structured "quests" in target applications:
- Applications: Google Sheets, Google Slides, Figma, Canva (more coming soon)
- User base: Global contributor network across 180+ countries
- Task context: Authentic work sessions (financial analysis, presentation creation, design work, etc.)
- Compensation: Users are paid based on session length and data quality
Dataset Structure
Each record contains:
id
: Unique session identifiervideo_url
: Screen recording of the interaction sessioninput_metadata
: Structured JSON containing granular interaction eventstask_description
: User-provided description of what they were doingquest_type
: Application category (Sheets, Slides, Figma, Canva)profession
: User's professional backgroundsynthetically_generated_instruction
: Synthetically generated task instruction for training purposes. Represents the context of the full task.synthetically_generated_thought_metadata
: (Beta) Synthetically generated thoughts for each user step. Represents the thought of the current step.
Input Metadata Schema
The input_metadata
field contains timestamped interaction events with the following structure:
{
"relative_timestamp_ms": 1028,
"type": "click",
"x": 186.0,
"y": 62.445,
"button": "button_left",
"screenshot_url": "https://...",
"click_count": 1
}
Key fields:
relative_timestamp_ms
: Milliseconds since session starttype
: Event type (click, input, key_down, key_up, mouseover_start, mouseover_end, drag_start, drag_end, scroll)x,y
: Screen coordinates (normalized for display resolution)screenshot_url
: URL to corresponding interface screenshotinput_data
: Text content for input eventskey_code
: Keyboard key identifier (DOM KeyboardEvent codes)
Thought Metadata (Beta)
An additional field, synthetically_generated_thought_metadata
, is included to provide synthetically generated thoughts for each user step. This field is designed to enhance the dataset's utility for training reasoning VLMs like UI-TARS 1.5. It is not to be confused with synthetically_generated_instruction
, which is the context of the full task.
Step Generation and Aggregation
To create thought_metadata
, we begin with the input_metadata
where each row represents an individual user action. As a first stage, we aggregate actions into steps, where each step represents either a single action or a collection of actions.
Batch Processing Strategy
We partition the steps into batches with the following parameters:
where:
- (pre_window_size): Number of steps preceding the target step used for context
- (post_window_size): Number of subsequent steps used for context
- (batch_size): Interval between target steps for thought generation. i.e. if , then for every 15 steps, we generate a thought.
The prevents overlapping thoughts and ensures that thoughts generated in earlier batches are considered completed when generating subsequent thoughts.
LLM Usage
The processed step batches are fed to GPT-4o with its vision API, using high image detail settings. Each thought generation process consumes approximately 30,000 input tokens.
Quality Assurance
Data quality is maintained through:
- Automated filtering of invalid interactions and privacy-sensitive content
- Quality scoring based on task coherence and completion patterns
- Compensation algorithms that reward genuine engagement
- Differential privacy techniques to prevent individual behavior reconstruction
Use Cases
This dataset is designed for:
- Training computer use agents on authentic interaction patterns
- Studying human-computer interaction behaviors across diverse populations
- Developing more robust GUI automation systems
- Research on temporal reasoning and error recovery in sequential decision-making
Ethical Considerations
- All users provide informed consent for data collection and redistribution
- Privacy-sensitive content is automatically filtered
- Compensation ensures fair value exchange for user contributions
- Data collection follows ethical guidelines for crowdsourced research
Data Scale and Growth
The dataset is continuously growing through ongoing collection:
- Planned: Scaling to 100,000+ hours over 2025
Citation
If you use this dataset in your research, please cite:
@dataset{pango2025,
title={Pango: Real-World Computer Use Agent Training Data},
author={Chakra Labs},
year={2025},
url={https://huggingface.co/datasets/chakra-labs/pango}
}
Contact
For access to the full dataset or collaboration opportunities, please contact Chakra Labs.
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