Compare/claude-context vs Weights & Biases Weave 2.0

AI tool comparison

claude-context vs Weights & Biases Weave 2.0

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

C

Developer Tools

claude-context

Turn your entire codebase into instant context for Claude Code via MCP

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

claude-context is an MCP (Model Context Protocol) server from Zilliz that gives Claude Code instant semantic search across your entire codebase. Instead of manually pointing an AI assistant at specific files, it indexes your project into a vector store and serves up the most relevant code snippets for any query — no context window stuffing required. Built by the team behind Milvus, it uses Zilliz Cloud or a local Milvus instance as the vector backend. Setup is a single config file pointing at your repo, and it integrates with Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, or any MCP-compatible client. The semantic search goes far beyond keyword matching, surfacing related functions across disconnected files. With 871 GitHub stars on its first day of trending, it's clearly hitting a real pain point for developers who work on larger codebases where context limits constantly get in the way. The fact that it's TypeScript-native and MIT licensed makes it easy to self-host and extend.

W

Developer Tools

Weights & Biases Weave 2.0

Automated agent evaluation with LLM-as-judge and regression tracking

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Weave 2.0 is an agent evaluation framework from Weights & Biases that automates LLM-as-judge scoring pipelines, tracks performance regressions across model versions, and provides a prompt playground built for multi-turn agentic workflows. It extends W&B's existing experiment tracking infrastructure into the agent evaluation space. The tool is aimed at ML engineers and teams shipping production LLM agents who need systematic quality measurement beyond vibe-checking.

Decision
claude-context
Weights & Biases Weave 2.0
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source
Free tier / $50/mo Teams / Enterprise contact sales
Best for
Turn your entire codebase into instant context for Claude Code via MCP
Automated agent evaluation with LLM-as-judge and regression tracking
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

This solves the single most frustrating thing about AI coding assistants on real projects — the constant context window juggling. Point it at your repo, forget about manually including files, and let semantic search do the work. I set it up in under 10 minutes and it immediately surfaced related code I'd forgotten existed.

78/100 · ship

The primitive here is clear: a versioned evaluation pipeline that wraps your agent traces, runs LLM-as-judge scoring, and diffs results across deployments — all sitting on top of W&B's existing run-tracking infra. The DX bet is that teams already in the W&B ecosystem get agent evals essentially for free, which is the right call. The moment of truth is wiring your first eval dataset and seeing regression diffs without writing your own scorer — that's genuinely useful and would take a weekend to replicate correctly with Braintrust or a homegrown JSONL diff script. The specific decision that earns the ship: they built regression tracking as a first-class primitive, not an afterthought. Most eval tools stop at scoring; Weave 2.0 asks 'compared to what?' which is the actual question.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

You're trading one dependency (Claude's context window) for two others: a vector database and Zilliz's cloud service. On a large enough codebase the indexing latency and relevance tuning become their own maintenance burden. Also worth noting that Zilliz makes money on this tool — 'open source' here means the server, not the storage backend.

72/100 · ship

The direct competitors here are Braintrust, LangSmith, and to a lesser extent Arize Phoenix — all of which have LLM-as-judge and version comparison already. Weave 2.0's defensible differentiator is the W&B lineage: if your team already uses W&B for model training runs, plugging agent evals into the same dashboard is a real workflow win, not a marketing claim. The scenario where this breaks is a team evaluating agents that span multiple providers or use complex tool-call graphs — the multi-turn playground is promising but the complexity ceiling on real agentic workflows hits fast. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's OpenAI and Anthropic shipping native eval dashboards tied to their API consoles, which they will. What would make me wrong: W&B locks in enterprise ML teams so deeply through existing training infrastructure that the eval surface becomes table-stakes retention, not a standalone product.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

This is what the MCP ecosystem was designed for — turning specialized infrastructure into first-class AI context. Once every major codebase has a vector-indexed MCP server sitting next to it, AI coding agents stop being file-level tools and become genuine project-aware collaborators. Early days, but this is the right direction.

75/100 · ship

The thesis Weave 2.0 is betting on: by 2028, agent quality assurance is as standardized as unit testing is today, and teams will need continuous eval pipelines running in CI the same way they run linters. That's a falsifiable and plausible claim — the dependency is that agent deployments become frequent enough to make manual eval economically insane, which is already happening at scale. The second-order effect if this wins: the LLM-as-judge pattern gets commoditized infrastructure treatment, which shifts competitive moats from 'we have evals' to 'we have better eval datasets' — and whoever owns curated eval corpora gains leverage. Weave 2.0 is riding the trend of eval-as-infrastructure, and it's on-time rather than early — Braintrust has been here, LangSmith has been here. The future state where this is infrastructure: every W&B-instrumented model training run has a downstream agent eval suite attached, making eval a natural extension of the MLOps loop rather than a separate product category.

Creator
80/100 · ship

Even for design systems and component libraries this is a game-changer — instead of manually hunting for the right component variant, you can describe what you need and it surfaces the exact reference. Would love to see this extended to design token files and Figma exports.

No panel take
PM
No panel take
58/100 · skip

The job-to-be-done is 'measure whether my agent got better or worse after I changed something' — that's clean and real. But the completeness problem is significant: a user cannot fully switch to Weave 2.0 for agent evals today without also maintaining their existing observability stack, their own judge prompt library, and a separate ground-truth dataset curation process that Weave doesn't help with. The onboarding story for someone not already in W&B is rough — the value proposition requires too much prior context about W&B's run model before the eval-specific features make sense. The product has a point of view on how evals should run (automated, versioned, judge-scored) but punts on the hardest problem: what makes a good eval dataset? Until Weave has an opinion on that, it's a pipeline runner for a dataset you already had to build yourself, which is half a product.

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