AI tool comparison
Azure AI Foundry Model Routing vs Eyeball
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Azure AI Foundry Model Routing
Auto-route prompts to the right model, cut API costs 40–60%
100%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Azure AI Foundry Model Routing is an intelligent dispatch layer that classifies incoming prompts by complexity and automatically routes them to the most cost-effective capable model in your configured pool. It ships as a GA service in Azure AI Foundry, dropping into existing inference pipelines with a single endpoint swap. Early adopters report 40–60% API cost reductions on mixed workloads without measurable quality degradation.
Developer Tools
Eyeball
Inline screenshots with every AI claim — hallucination's paper trail
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Eyeball is an indie tool that fights AI hallucination in document analysis by embedding inline screenshots of the actual source passages alongside each AI-generated claim. When you analyze a PDF or document with Eyeball, the output is a Word doc where every statement has a highlighted screenshot of the precise text it came from — because screenshots are harder to hallucinate than quotes. The tool emerged from a simple observation: AI systems routinely fabricate citations and misquote sources, and quote-only verification still requires humans to manually hunt down the original text. Eyeball short-circuits that by attaching the visual evidence directly to each claim in the output document. Legal, compliance, and research reviewers can audit AI outputs at a glance rather than cross-referencing. Built in Python, Apache 2.0 licensed, launched as a Show HN six days ago and gaining traction. The approach is low-tech by design — no vector embeddings, no proprietary API calls — just precise text highlighting, screenshot capture, and Word document assembly. The simplicity is the point: verifiable AI outputs shouldn't require a research budget.
Reviewer scorecard
“The primitive is a complexity classifier that sits in front of your model pool and makes the cheap-vs-expensive call so you don't have to — genuinely useful infra that I've hacked together manually more than once. The DX bet is endpoint-compatibility: one URL swap, existing SDK calls, no schema changes, which is exactly right. The moment of truth is registering your model pool and watching the first routing decision happen transparently; if the observability surface shows which model each request hit and why, this earns its keep immediately. The specific decision that earns the ship: making this a passthrough layer with no new SDK dependency rather than another SDK you have to adopt.”
“This is the kind of clever, unglamorous tool that actually solves a real problem. The insight that screenshots are harder to hallucinate than quotes is simple but profound. Drop this into any pipeline that serves legal or compliance users immediately.”
“Direct competitor is LiteLLM's router plus any prompt complexity classifier you wire up yourself — the open-source path exists and is well-documented. Where this breaks: latency-sensitive applications where the classification overhead exceeds the cost savings, and high-stakes tasks where the router confidently misclassifies a complex reasoning prompt as 'simple' and hands it to a small model. The 40–60% cost reduction claim comes from Microsoft's own early adopter data, which is not an independent benchmark and should be treated accordingly. What kills it in 12 months: OpenAI or Anthropic ships native tier-routing at the API level, eliminating the need for an intermediate dispatch layer — this tool's entire thesis evaporates if model providers internalize the abstraction.”
“Screenshots of source text don't prevent the underlying problem — an AI can still misinterpret or misconstrue what the screenshot says. It adds friction to the review process without fixing the root cause. Useful for basic verification but don't mistake it for a hallucination solution.”
“The buyer is any Azure-committed enterprise already running inference at scale — this comes out of the existing AI/ML budget and requires zero new procurement, which is the cleanest possible GTM. The moat is distribution: Microsoft doesn't need defensibility because it owns the infrastructure layer underneath, and a company already paying Azure egress costs isn't going to route through a third-party classifier. The stress test that matters isn't model price collapse — it's whether Azure keeps model prices high enough that routing arbitrage stays meaningful; if GPT-5-mini costs a rounding error, the whole value prop shrinks to quality tiering alone. Still a ship because 'save 50% on your biggest cloud line item with one config change' is a self-approving budget decision.”
“The thesis is: prompt complexity is classifiable at inference time with enough accuracy to arbitrage meaningfully across a heterogeneous model pool, and that arbitrage window persists long enough to justify building infrastructure around it. This bet requires two things to stay true — model capability gaps don't collapse (a fast-improving frontier might make routing moot) and inference costs remain differentiated across tiers (plausible for 2–3 more years given compute economics). The second-order effect that's underappreciated: if this works at scale, it normalizes the idea of the model pool as infrastructure rather than product choice, which shifts power from model providers to orchestration layers — Azure included. The tool is on-time to the model-routing trend, not early, but being the platform that makes it boring-and-reliable is a legitimate strategic position.”
“Provenance-by-design is going to be mandatory for AI in regulated industries. Eyeball's approach — baking visual evidence into every claim — points toward a future where AI outputs are self-auditing. This is an indie tool today; it's a compliance standard in three years.”
“For editorial and research work, knowing exactly where an AI got its information is table stakes. Eyeball makes that process visual and immediate — that's a huge quality-of-life improvement for anyone who fact-checks AI-generated research.”
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