AI tool comparison
Azure Foundry Hosted Agents vs MemPalace
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 Foundry Hosted Agents
Per-session isolated agent sandboxes on Azure — scale to zero, any framework
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Microsoft Azure's Foundry Agent Service now offers Hosted Agents in public preview — per-session isolated compute sandboxes purpose-built for running AI agents at scale. Each session gets its own container with a persistent filesystem, internet access (optional), and a Python environment pre-loaded with common agent dependencies. Sessions spin up in seconds and terminate — and stop billing — the moment the agent task completes. The design is framework-agnostic: it officially supports LangGraph, OpenAI Agents SDK, Claude Agent SDK, and Microsoft's own Agent Framework, with others planned. This removes one of the most awkward parts of deploying agents in production: figuring out where they actually run. The persistent filesystem per session means agents can read and write files across their task without external storage configuration. Pricing is $0.0994/vCPU-hour and $0.0118/GiB-hour — competitive with Lambda/Cloud Run for bursty workloads. The service is available in six Azure regions at launch. For enterprises already invested in Azure, this is a compelling "we just figured out the infra" moment. Independent developers can also use it without an enterprise agreement.
Developer Tools
MemPalace
Free AI memory that stores conversations verbatim — no summarization, no API costs
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
MemPalace is a free, MIT-licensed AI memory framework that stores LLM conversation data verbatim locally — no AI summarization step, no per-query API costs. It integrates with Claude Code, ChatGPT, and Cursor via MCP, and claims the highest LongMemEval benchmark score among free memory frameworks at 96.6% (initially claimed 100% before community pressure forced a correction after GitHub issue #29 exposed test-set tuning). The project went viral on GitHub with 23,000+ stars in under 48 hours, partly because it was built by actress Milla Jovovich and developer Ben Sigman — an unusual origin story that dominated early coverage. But the technical pitch is real: competing paid solutions (Mem0 at $19–249/month, Zep at $25+/month) do similar things and charge for the privilege. MemPalace runs fully local, connects to any POSIX filesystem, and the verbatim storage approach avoids hallucination artifacts introduced by AI-summarized memory. The catch: verbatim storage means much higher storage overhead than summarization-based approaches, retrieval latency grows with context size, and the benchmark controversy raised questions about the team's methodology. For personal projects and small teams, the zero-cost angle is hard to argue with. For production systems where memory quality is critical, wait for independent benchmarking.
Reviewer scorecard
“Framework-agnostic hosted sandboxes with scale-to-zero is exactly what I need for deploying agents without maintaining my own Kubernetes cluster. The per-session isolation eliminates a whole class of security concerns I was handling manually. The Claude Agent SDK support means I don't have to choose between Azure and my preferred model.”
“Zero API cost memory is the killer feature here. I was paying $40/month for Mem0 to give my coding agent project context — MemPalace does the same thing for free and runs entirely local. MCP integration works cleanly with Claude Code and Cursor out of the box.”
“Public preview means production instability risk and pricing could change significantly at GA. The cold start time for agent sessions needs to be benchmarked against real workloads before committing. And six regions is thin coverage for global deployments — wait for broader availability.”
“The benchmark controversy is a red flag — the team claimed 100% on LongMemEval but was caught tuning on the test set. Verbatim storage also means no noise reduction and exponential storage growth. At 23k stars in 48 hours this smells more like celebrity hype than technical validation. Wait for independent benchmarks.”
“The battle for agent infrastructure is the next cloud wars — and Microsoft just answered Google Cloud's agent platform launch with their own. Framework-agnostic compute that works with any model provider is a smart commoditization play: own the infrastructure layer, let the model battle play out above it.”
“Persistent AI memory is going to be a core primitive for every personal AI system. MemPalace democratizing it with zero cost and local storage is the right direction — this is infrastructure that should be free. The benchmark mishap will be forgotten if the product performs in the real world.”
“This is squarely developer infrastructure — not directly relevant to creative workflows unless your studio runs its own agents. Worth watching for the ecosystem tools that get built on top of it.”
“My AI assistant finally remembers my brand guidelines, preferred tools, and ongoing projects without me re-explaining them every session. Free, local, and no terms-of-service anxiety about where my work is going. Exactly what the creative workflow needs.”
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