Compare/Cai vs Spectrum

AI tool comparison

Cai vs Spectrum

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

C

Productivity

Cai

One keyboard shortcut. Local AI. No account, no cloud, no telemetry.

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Cai (⌥C) is a macOS utility that runs AI actions on anything — selected text, clipboard content, active app context — with a single keyboard shortcut, entirely locally. It ships with Ministral 3B bundled, so it works offline out of the box with no API key, no account signup, and no network requests. For developers who prefer their own stack, it also connects to Ollama, LM Studio, Apple Intelligence, and OpenRouter. Beyond text transformations, Cai acts as a local automation layer: it can open GitHub issue drafts in your browser, create Linear tickets from selected text, run custom shell scripts, and chain multiple actions together. The whole thing is MIT licensed and open source. The UX is intentionally minimal — no chat interface, no persistent window — just a quick invocation overlay that appears, acts, and disappears. The positioning is clear: Cai competes with productivity tools like Raycast AI and PopClip, but wins on the privacy angle. There's no vendor seeing your prompts, no subscription creep, and no dependency on internet connectivity. For developers, writers, and researchers working with sensitive content who want AI assistance without cloud exposure, Cai fills a real gap that bigger AI apps can't — or won't — fill.

S

Productivity

Spectrum

Deploy AI agents to every interface your users already live in

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Spectrum, from Photon, launched on Product Hunt today with 105 upvotes and a simple but sharp premise: your users don't want to learn a new AI interface—they want AI to show up in Slack, Teams, email, and every other tool they already use. Spectrum is an agent deployment layer that routes your AI agents to wherever your users are, with no per-integration custom dev work. The core product is an abstraction layer that handles the connector plumbing: authenticate once, and your agent can receive messages and send responses across all connected channels. Built-in conversation management means agents maintain context across channels—a user can start a request in Slack, continue it in Teams, and finish in email without losing thread. The platform also handles rate limiting, authentication, and error handling for each channel. For teams building internal AI tools or customer-facing AI assistants, this solves real integration pain. Building a Slack bot, Teams integration, email handler, and web widget separately takes weeks per channel. Spectrum reduces that to a single agent definition deployed everywhere. The question is pricing and lock-in: if Photon becomes the integration layer, they sit in a strategically critical position.

Decision
Cai
Spectrum
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free / Open Source (MIT)
Freemium / Paid tiers
Best for
One keyboard shortcut. Local AI. No account, no cloud, no telemetry.
Deploy AI agents to every interface your users already live in
Category
Productivity
Productivity

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

I set up Cai with a custom action to take a stack trace from my clipboard and open a pre-filled GitHub issue in 10 minutes. The Ollama backend means I can use a larger local model when I'm at my desk and fall back to Ministral 3B on the go. MIT license means I can fork it and add my team's internal tools.

80/100 · ship

I've built the same Slack bot four times in different frameworks and it's never not painful. A write-once, deploy-everywhere agent layer is exactly what I'd pay for. The cross-channel context persistence alone is worth evaluating.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

Ministral 3B is fine for basic text tasks but it stumbles on anything requiring real reasoning or domain knowledge. Most users will hit its limits quickly and need to set up Ollama anyway — which is a non-trivial setup process for non-developers. The privacy story is genuine but the capability bar is lower than what cloud alternatives offer.

45/100 · skip

Every integration platform promises this—Zapier, Make, n8n, Workato all have 'write once, run everywhere' messaging. The enterprise channels (Teams, Slack) have quirky APIs that break constantly with updates. Spectrum is taking on significant maintenance burden that will eventually get priced into your bill.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Cai represents a class of tools that become dramatically more useful as on-device models improve. When Bonsai-scale 1-bit models hit 8B+ quality at 131 tokens/sec locally, Cai's architecture is exactly right — a minimal, composable action layer on top of local inference. The MIT license means the community will build the plugin ecosystem.

80/100 · ship

The interface layer for AI agents is becoming the new battleground. Whoever controls where agents appear controls where work gets done. Spectrum is building valuable real estate in that layer.

Creator
80/100 · ship

I've been looking for a way to do quick AI rewrites and tone adjustments in any app — not just in a web browser — without pasting things into a chat interface. Cai works in Figma, Notion, Miro, everything. The local privacy angle matters a lot when I'm working on client content that's under NDA.

80/100 · ship

For content and community teams, having one AI agent that shows up in Discord, Slack, and email simultaneously without separate setups is a genuine time saver. Spectrum removes the 'which channel do we actually deploy to?' paralysis.

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