AI tool comparison
Apfel vs Clawdi
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Apfel
Tap the free AI already built into your Mac
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Apfel is a Swift 6.3 command-line tool that cracks open the on-device language model Apple ships with every Apple Silicon Mac running macOS 26 (Tahoe). Instead of requiring a Claude, OpenAI, or Gemini subscription, Apfel routes through Apple's FoundationModels framework and gives you three interfaces from a single brew install: a pipe-friendly CLI, an interactive chat with context management, and an OpenAI-compatible local HTTP server built on Hummingbird. Under the hood, every token is generated on your Neural Engine and GPU — nothing leaves your machine. The model is roughly 3B parameters with a 4,096-token context window, fast enough for scripting, summarisation, and quick Q&A without latency you'd notice. Pipe-friendly stdin/stdout, JSON output mode, and proper exit codes make it trivially composable with jq, xargs, and shell scripts. The OpenAI-compatible server mode is the killer feature for developers: point any tool that speaks the OpenAI API at localhost and it just works — locally, for free, with zero cold-start. The project is MIT-licensed, started by a solo developer on March 24, 2026, and hit 513 HN points within days of the Show HN post.
Developer Tools
Clawdi
Run OpenClaw and Hermes agents in the cloud — zero setup required
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Clawdi is a fully managed cloud platform for running AI agents like OpenClaw, Hermes, and Claude Code without any local configuration. Each user gets a sandboxed cloud VM with persistent memory, a browser, file editing, and terminal access — all running inside Phala's confidential compute infrastructure (TEE) for privacy and isolation. The platform decouples agent memory, API keys, skills, and app integrations from the underlying engine, so you can switch frameworks without losing your entire setup. It ships with OAuth integrations for Gmail and Slack, built-in cron job scheduling, browser automation, and long-term memory. Getting started takes roughly three minutes — no terminal, no YAML, no Docker. Built by Marvin Tong, Maggie Liu, and Xiaolu, Clawdi directly solves the agentic developer's most painful friction: rebuilding your setup from scratch every time you try a new agent framework. At $29/month flat, it targets individuals and small teams who want always-on cloud agents without managing infrastructure.
Reviewer scorecard
“The OpenAI-compatible server is a genuine unlock — I swapped my local dev config from Ollama to Apfel in two minutes and everything just worked. For Apple Silicon owners who want zero-latency local AI without model downloads, this is the move.”
“This is the 'it just works' solution I've been wanting for months. Spinning up a persistent OpenClaw instance in the cloud without touching config files is genuinely liberating — and the Phala TEE backing means my API keys aren't just floating in someone's S3 bucket.”
“A 3B-parameter model with a 4K context window is impressive for on-device, but it's nowhere near Claude or GPT-5.5 quality. If your task needs real reasoning or long context, you're back to paying for API credits anyway. This is a neat party trick, not a replacement.”
“At $29/month you're paying for a single managed agent VM, which is expensive compared to just renting a small VPS and running it yourself. The lock-in to their specific supported frameworks (OpenClaw, Hermes, Claude Code) will bite you the moment you want something they don't support yet.”
“Apfel is the first glimpse of a world where capable on-device AI comes pre-installed, not downloaded. As Apple's model improves with each macOS release, tools like Apfel will inherit the upgrade for free. The distribution moat Apple is quietly building here is enormous.”
“Clawdi is a prototype of what 'personal AI infrastructure' looks like when it matures. Persistent memory + always-on agents + confidential compute is a legitimate architectural unlock — the TEE angle alone makes this interesting for privacy-sensitive enterprise use cases.”
“I used it to batch-summarise 40 draft posts overnight with a simple shell loop — no API bill, no rate limits, no internet required. For content workflows that need a cheap first pass, it's already practical.”
“For non-technical creators who want an agent that remembers context, stays online, and connects to Gmail and Slack without requiring a DevOps background, this hits a real gap. The three-minute setup promise is the key feature for this audience.”
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