AI tool comparison
AI Edge Gallery vs Offsite
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
Offsite
One org chart for your humans and your agents
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Offsite is a unified workspace that places human teammates and AI agents in the same live org chart, giving teams full visibility into what every agent is doing at any moment. When an agent takes an action — filing a ticket, sending a message, running code — it appears in a shared activity feed that everyone on the team can see and approve or roll back. The platform supports Claude Code, Codex, and any MCP-compatible agent out of the box, letting teams mix and match models for different roles. The org chart isn't cosmetic: permissions, approval chains, and delegation rules all flow from it. An agent assigned to QA can escalate to a human engineer automatically if it hits a decision above its confidence threshold. Currently free in alpha, Offsite is aimed at teams already running AI agents in production who are frustrated with the black-box nature of agent actions. It's less about building agents and more about governing them — a category that's still wide open.
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.”
“The approval chain concept alone justifies a look — it's exactly what's missing when you run agents in any serious workflow. Being able to roll back an agent action from a shared feed is the kind of thing that lets you actually trust agents with real tasks.”
“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.”
“Looks polished but 'org chart for agents' is still a concept in search of a standard. Until MCP agent identity and permissions are actually standardized across providers, governance tools like this risk becoming adapters to a moving target. Alpha software at that stage is a big ask.”
“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.”
“The shift from 'AI tools' to 'AI coworkers' requires exactly this kind of infrastructure — not another model, but a shared organizational layer. Offsite is early, but the problem it's solving (agent accountability at team scale) is the defining challenge of the next five years.”
“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.”
“For creative teams using agents to handle research, drafting, and scheduling in parallel, the shared activity feed would be a game changer. Seeing exactly what the 'AI researcher' did and being able to pause it beats Slack bots by a mile.”
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