Compare/Browser Harness vs Microsoft Agent Framework

AI tool comparison

Browser Harness vs Microsoft Agent Framework

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

B

Developer Tools

Browser Harness

Self-healing browser automation that writes its own missing functions mid-run

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Browser Harness is the browser-use team's second major release — a radically minimal browser automation framework for LLM agents (~592 lines of core code) that solves the most painful problem in agent browser automation: when an agent hits a UI pattern it doesn't know how to handle, it writes the missing helper function itself and continues. Under the hood it speaks raw Chrome DevTools Protocol with no abstraction layers, giving agents direct control over network interception, JavaScript execution, and DOM manipulation. The "self-healing" mechanism works by having the LLM detect a failure mode, generate a new action primitive (a small Python function), inject it into the runtime, and retry — all within the same session. Successful new primitives are persisted to a local library that improves future runs. This is a meaningful architectural departure from Playwright-based agent frameworks. By staying thin and close to the metal, Browser Harness avoids the selector fragility and timing issues that plague higher-level automation wrappers. The cloud remote browser tier (3 concurrent sessions free) means you can run it without managing Chrome infrastructure. For teams building LLM-powered browser agents that need to handle the messy real web, this is a notable step forward.

M

Developer Tools

Microsoft Agent Framework

Production-ready multi-provider agent framework with MCP + A2A support

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Microsoft has shipped version 1.0 of its Agent Framework for .NET and Python — a production-grade SDK for building multi-agent systems that works across Azure OpenAI, OpenAI, Anthropic Claude, Amazon Bedrock, Google Gemini, and Ollama simultaneously. It's the company's attempt to be the neutral orchestration layer across the increasingly fragmented AI provider landscape. The framework ships with built-in MCP (Model Context Protocol) tool discovery and invocation, plus support for A2A (Agent-to-Agent) protocol for cross-runtime coordination between agents built on different frameworks. Orchestration patterns include sequential, concurrent, handoff, group chat, and Magentic-One (the multi-agent research pattern Microsoft published last year). There's also a Semantic Kernel integration path for teams already using that ecosystem. For enterprise teams that have been evaluating LangChain, CrewAI, LlamaIndex Workflows, or Autogen, Microsoft Agent Framework 1.0 positions itself as the 'boring infrastructure' choice — opinionated enough to ship fast, flexible enough to avoid vendor lock-in. The cross-provider MCP support in particular is notable: one tool definition, any model.

Decision
Browser Harness
Microsoft Agent Framework
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free (MIT) / Cloud remote browsers (usage-based)
Open Source (MIT)
Best for
Self-healing browser automation that writes its own missing functions mid-run
Production-ready multi-provider agent framework with MCP + A2A support
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

592 lines to replace Playwright for LLM agents is a compelling trade. The self-healing primitive generation is genuinely clever — I tested it on three legacy enterprise portals and it handled two that my previous Playwright-based agent couldn't navigate. Direct CDP access means I can intercept and modify network responses too, which opens up a lot of testing use cases.

80/100 · ship

MCP support plus A2A out of the box is the combination I've been waiting for in an enterprise-friendly package. If your team is .NET-first, this is now the obvious choice — stop evaluating and start shipping.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

Writing code mid-execution and injecting it into a running agent is a liability in any production environment. One hallucinated helper function could corrupt form submissions, delete data, or exfiltrate session tokens. The security model here is essentially 'trust the LLM' — which is not a model I'd deploy against anything sensitive.

45/100 · skip

Another orchestration framework in a field that's already saturated. The 'works with everything' pitch usually means 'optimized for nothing' — and 1.0 software from Microsoft often means 'production-ready in 2027.' Wait for the ecosystem to mature.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Browser Harness is early evidence of the 'tool-writing agent' pattern maturing — agents that improve their own capabilities at runtime, not just at training time. The primitive library that accumulates across sessions is a proto-memory system. This is what agentic browser control looks like before it gets commoditized.

80/100 · ship

A2A protocol support across runtimes is the infrastructure play that matters here. If agents from different frameworks can coordinate natively, the fragmentation problem in multi-agent systems essentially disappears — Microsoft may have just defined the standard.

Creator
80/100 · ship

I use browser automation for scraping design inspiration and pulling competitive pricing, and the fragility of existing tools has always been a headache. The idea that the agent just figures out how to handle a weird modal or cookie banner on its own — without me having to write a special case — is exactly what I've been wanting.

45/100 · skip

Not really a creator tool, but as a solo builder who occasionally glues agent workflows together — the provider-agnostic approach is appealing. I'll revisit once the community has stress-tested it.

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