AI tool comparison
Appsmith vs Baton
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Appsmith
Open-source low-code platform for internal tools
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Appsmith is an open-source low-code platform for building admin panels, dashboards, and CRUD apps. Connect to any database or API with drag-and-drop widgets.
Developer Tools
Baton
Run multiple AI coding agents in parallel, each in isolated git worktrees
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Baton is a native desktop orchestration tool for running multiple AI coding agents in parallel — each in its own isolated git worktree. Built for developers who want to run Claude Code, Gemini CLI, or OpenAI Codex CLI simultaneously without agents overwriting each other's work. The key insight is elegant: git worktrees let you check out the same repo to multiple directories, each on its own branch. Baton makes this trivial — auto-generating branch names and workspace titles with AI, surfacing notification badges when agents finish or hit errors, and letting you toggle "Accept Edits" mode per workspace independently. At $49 one-time with no subscription, Baton is aimed squarely at developers who find single-agent coding frustrating and want to run multiple tasks concurrently. The free tier caps at 4 concurrent workspaces. It's available for Mac, Windows, and Linux.
Reviewer scorecard
“Open-source Retool alternative that you can self-host. JavaScript transformations and API bindings are flexible.”
“This is the workflow tool I didn't know I needed. Running three Claude Code instances on different features simultaneously, each in isolation, feels like having a real team. The worktree isolation means no constant merge conflicts — and getting notified when agents finish is genuinely delightful.”
“Self-hostable internal tool builder. For internal dashboards and admin panels, it saves real development time.”
“It's a GUI wrapper around git worktrees and process management — most of what Baton does can be scripted in bash in an afternoon. The $49 price is reasonable but the moat is thin. Expect this to become a built-in feature of Cursor or Windsurf within a release cycle.”
“Low-code internal tools are becoming standard. Open-source options like Appsmith democratize access.”
“Parallel agent orchestration at the desktop level is the first step toward autonomous software teams. Baton is primitive, but the pattern it establishes — isolated worktrees, parallel execution, async notification — is exactly how future dev environments will work. Get comfortable with the paradigm now.”
“For non-developers using AI coding tools, Baton removes a lot of the confusion about why agents interfere with each other. The UX is clean enough that even designers who occasionally vibe-code can manage multiple tasks at once without losing their minds.”
Weekly AI Tool Verdicts
Get the next comparison in your inbox
New AI tools ship daily. We compare them before you waste an afternoon.