Compare/Cal.diy vs Rowboat

AI tool comparison

Cal.diy vs Rowboat

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

C

Productivity

Cal.diy

Cal.com, forked — all enterprise code removed, MIT licensed

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Cal.diy is a community-maintained fork of Cal.com with all enterprise and commercial code stripped out — no Teams, no Organizations, no Insights, no SSO/SAML, and crucially, no license key required. Everything works out of the box under a pure MIT license. The goal is a truly self-hostable, zero-commercial-strings scheduling platform for individuals and small teams who don't need enterprise features but do need full data ownership. The technical stack is unchanged from Cal.com: Next.js, React, tRPC, Prisma ORM, and Tailwind CSS, with support for Google Calendar, Outlook, Daily.co video, email notifications, and standard event type booking flows. The project effectively resolves the "open core trap" by maintaining a clean split: if you want enterprise features, pay Cal.com. If you want a completely free, auditable, no-vendor-lock scheduling system, Cal.diy is the answer. With 41.5k stars (inherited from the Cal.com fork lineage), it has massive visibility. The maintainers are explicit that this is best suited for advanced self-hosters with server admin experience, not a one-click deploy for non-technical users. But for developers who want scheduling infrastructure without SaaS dependencies, it's arguably the cleanest option available.

R

Productivity

Rowboat

AI coworker that builds a local, inspectable knowledge graph from your work

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Rowboat (YC S24) is an open-source AI coworker that connects to your email, calendar, and meeting notes, then builds a persistent knowledge graph stored as plain Markdown files on your local machine. The graph is fully inspectable — it's just a folder of .md files you can open in Obsidian, edit, or commit to git. Using this local knowledge graph, Rowboat helps draft emails in your voice, prepares meeting briefs before calls, generates docs and summaries, and answers questions about your work history. It supports MCP (Model Context Protocol) for connecting external tools like GitHub, Linear, and Notion. Runs entirely on your machine with no data sent to external servers beyond your LLM API calls. The key differentiator is transparency. Unlike AI memory systems that store knowledge in opaque vector databases or cloud embeddings, Rowboat's knowledge graph is human-readable at every step. You can audit what it knows about you, delete specific facts, and understand exactly why it drafted an email the way it did.

Decision
Cal.diy
Rowboat
Panel verdict
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source (MIT)
Free / Open Source (self-hosted)
Best for
Cal.com, forked — all enterprise code removed, MIT licensed
AI coworker that builds a local, inspectable knowledge graph from your work
Category
Productivity
Productivity

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

The open core model has always been a tension with Cal.com — features gated behind enterprise licensing in a supposedly open-source project. Cal.diy resolves that cleanly. The stack is familiar, the MIT license is genuine, and for anyone building a product that needs scheduling infrastructure, this is the right starting point.

80/100 · ship

Inspectable Markdown-based memory is the right call. I can version-control the knowledge graph in git, grep through it, and actually understand what context my AI assistant has — that's more than I can say for any SaaS memory product. MCP support means it plugs into my existing toolchain.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

This is a maintenance burden in disguise. You're now responsible for keeping a large, complex Next.js codebase patched, secure, and up-to-date with upstream Cal.com changes — changes that may or may not land in the DIY fork on any predictable schedule. For most teams, Cal.com's free tier or Calendly is simply less operational overhead.

45/100 · skip

Self-hosted means you're on your own for setup, sync, and maintenance. Most people using AI coworker tools want them to just work — and polished competitors like Mem.ai and Notion AI have months of production hardening. The Markdown vault is clever but also fragile at scale.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Scheduling is increasingly the integration surface AI agents use to take real-world actions — booking meetings, blocking time, managing availability across workflows. Having a fully controllable, self-hosted scheduling layer that AI agents can write to without SaaS rate limits or webhook restrictions is a genuine infrastructure advantage for agentic systems.

80/100 · ship

Persistent, user-owned AI memory stored as plain text files is the foundation of truly personal AI assistants. When models can be swapped and knowledge graphs can be exported, you break vendor lock-in completely — Rowboat is building the right abstraction layer for the long term.

Creator
45/100 · skip

For content creators or solopreneurs who just need a Calendly replacement, self-hosting a full Next.js stack is overkill. The UX of the base Cal.com is fine but not exceptional, and the enterprise features you're losing (like organization-level insights) are actually useful for managing content calendar coordination across a team.

80/100 · ship

Having an AI that actually knows my past projects, writing style, and client relationships — stored in files I control — is exactly what I've wanted. Email drafting in my own voice based on real context beats generic ChatGPT outputs every time.

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