AI tool comparison
AI Edge Gallery vs AriaType
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Mobile AI
AI Edge Gallery
Run Gemma 4 and open-source LLMs directly on your Android or iPhone
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Google's AI Edge Gallery is a mobile application that turns your Android or iPhone into a local LLM inference machine. Available on Android 12+ and iOS 17+, the app runs open-source models—with particular focus on Google's Gemma 4 family—entirely on-device. No internet required, no data leaves your phone, no API costs. The Gallery supports multi-turn conversation with a Thinking Mode that lets you watch the model's reasoning steps, image analysis through multimodal capabilities, voice transcription and translation, model performance benchmarking on your specific device hardware, and even device automation powered by fine-tuned models. Custom models can be loaded via Hugging Face integration. The updated version with official Gemma 4 support is particularly timely: Gemma 4's 2B parameter model has been benchmarked outperforming its 12B predecessor on multi-turn benchmarks, and running it on a modern iPhone or Android flagship is now genuinely fast. For privacy-conscious users, developers who want to test local inference without cloud costs, or anyone who needs AI capabilities in environments without reliable internet, AI Edge Gallery bridges the gap between cutting-edge open-source models and practical mobile use.
Productivity
AriaType
Open-source AI voice input that works in any Mac app
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
AriaType is an open-source AI voice input tool for macOS that injects transcribed text into any application — no app integration required. Unlike Apple's built-in dictation or Whisper-based tools that only work inside apps that opt in, AriaType uses system-level accessibility APIs to drop transcribed text wherever your cursor is, across any app in macOS. Version 0.1 is a minimal viable release: local Whisper inference for privacy (no cloud), push-to-talk or always-on mode, and basic punctuation injection. The GitHub repo launched on Product Hunt today at #24 with 72 upvotes — modest traction but notably enthusiastic comments from developers who've been cobbling together similar solutions with Hammerspoon and shell scripts. The open-source angle matters: AriaType sits in the same space as VibeSonic and NovaVoice (already in our DB) but differentiates on transparency and community-extensibility. For power users who want to audit what's happening with their voice data, this is the option.
Reviewer scorecard
“On-device LLM inference on consumer phones with Gemma 4 support is a genuine capability milestone. The model benchmarking feature is practically useful for understanding what's actually running where. This is solid infrastructure for mobile AI development testing.”
“Local Whisper inference plus accessibility API injection is exactly the architecture I want for a voice input tool. v0.1 is rough but the foundation is right — I'd contribute to this over another closed-source dictation app.”
“On-device LLM quality still trails cloud APIs significantly for complex tasks. You're trading capability for privacy and offline access—that's a real tradeoff, not a free lunch. Battery drain and thermal throttling on extended sessions remain practical problems on most phones.”
“v0.1 is very rough — punctuation is inconsistent and the push-to-talk UX needs work. The market already has VibeSonic, Whisper Dictation, and Superwhisper; AriaType needs a clear differentiator beyond 'also open source.'”
“Local inference on mobile phones is the long game—as models compress and chips improve, the gap between on-device and cloud closes. AI Edge Gallery is Google planting a flag in the world where your phone is your private AI, not a terminal that routes everything through a data center.”
“An open, auditable voice input layer for macOS is infrastructure that should exist. As AI voice input becomes default for productivity workflows, having a community-maintained, privacy-first option is important — even if v0.1 isn't ready for daily use.”
“Privacy-first, works offline, no subscription—AI Edge Gallery is genuinely useful for creators who travel or work in low-connectivity environments and want AI assistance without sending their work to the cloud. The voice transcription feature alone is worth downloading for on-the-go note capture.”
“The open-source premise is great but in practice I need reliability over auditability. When I'm dictating copy for a client, dropped words and inconsistent punctuation cost me more time than they save — I'll check back at v0.5.”
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