Compare/Claudian vs Kollab

AI tool comparison

Claudian vs Kollab

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

C

Productivity

Claudian

Claude Code as an AI collaborator inside your Obsidian vault

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Claudian is an Obsidian plugin that embeds Claude Code directly into your knowledge vault — not as a chat sidebar, but as a full agent capable of reading, creating, editing, and linking notes with tool use and multi-step reasoning. It's the first plugin to bring genuine agent capabilities to Obsidian rather than wrapping a chat API. Once installed, Claudian can scan your vault for related notes, synthesize information across documents, create new notes with proper backlinks, and run user-defined workflows as repeatable commands. It understands Obsidian-specific constructs like frontmatter, tags, dataview queries, and the graph — treating your vault as a structured knowledge base rather than a folder of text files. The plugin is open source and was built by a solo developer experimenting with Obsidian's plugin API and Claude's tool-use capabilities. It's gaining traction fast in the PKM and second-brain communities, where the idea of a genuinely capable AI collaborator embedded in a private, offline-first knowledge base is a compelling alternative to cloud-native tools.

K

Productivity

Kollab

Shared workspace where AI agents become actual team members

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Kollab is an AI-native workspace designed so that AI Agents aren't just assistants in a sidebar but full participants in how teams get work done. The platform unifies agents, reusable Skills (packaged AI workflows), Bots, and a knowledge base into one shared environment — with memory that persists organizational context across sessions. The core differentiator is the Skills layer: teams build repeatable AI workflows once and share them across the org, so the agent that handles investor updates or competitive research can be invoked by anyone without re-prompting from scratch. The knowledge base turns documents and notes into sources agents can cite, while Bots push AI capabilities into Slack, Telegram, Discord, and Feishu without requiring anyone to leave their chat app. Connectors plug into Notion, Linear, Figma, GitHub, Google Drive, and Gmail. Pricing is genuinely accessible: Free (200 daily credits), Pro at $20/month (6,000 credits), and Max at $200/month (80,000 credits). The free tier is real enough to try seriously, and the product is clearly aimed at the non-technical majority who want AI teamwork without writing a single prompt template.

Decision
Claudian
Kollab
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source (free)
Free / $20/mo Pro / $200/mo Max
Best for
Claude Code as an AI collaborator inside your Obsidian vault
Shared workspace where AI agents become actual team members
Category
Productivity
Productivity

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

Giving Claude Code actual read-write access to an Obsidian vault — not just chat context — is the right model. The ability to run multi-step workflows that create linked notes and run dataview queries puts this well ahead of any chat plugin.

45/100 · skip

The primitive here is a shared prompt-and-context registry with a workflow runner bolted on — which is a real problem, but the DX bet is squarely on the no-code crowd, not engineers who'd actually compose this into something. The Skills layer sounds like saved prompts with parameters, and there's no public API, no SDK, no repo to audit — so the 'full participant' positioning is marketing until I can call an agent from my own code. The moment of truth is building your first Skill, and if that's a form with dropdowns rather than a function signature, I'm out.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

An agent with write access to your personal knowledge base is a trust cliff. A hallucinated backlink or an overwritten note could quietly corrupt months of organized thinking. The vault backup discipline required to use this safely isn't mentioned in the README.

45/100 · skip

The direct competitors here are Notion AI with its database integrations, and more pointedly, Microsoft Copilot Pages — both of which already sit inside workflows teams actually use daily, backed by companies that own the productivity stack. The specific scenario where Kollab breaks is at the organizational scale: persistent memory across sessions sounds great until you have 200 employees, conflicting contexts, and no audit trail for what the agent 'remembered.' What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's that Slack and Notion each ship a native Skills-equivalent, and the integration layer Kollab's Bots occupy evaporates overnight.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Obsidian's graph is one of the few personal knowledge structures rich enough to give an AI agent meaningful context. Claudian points at a future where your second brain and your AI collaborator are genuinely the same system, not two tools awkwardly integrated.

No panel take
Creator
80/100 · ship

For writers and researchers who already live in Obsidian, this is the most exciting release in months. Ask it to synthesize three interview notes into a first-draft outline, with backlinks intact — that alone pays for the setup time.

No panel take
Founder
No panel take
80/100 · ship

The buyer is a team lead or ops person at a 10–100 person company spending real hours rebuilding the same AI prompts across tools — that's a real budget line (productivity software) and a real pain point with a clear before/after. The pricing architecture is smart: credits scale with usage, the free tier is genuinely usable, and $20/month per user is a no-brainer procurement decision that bypasses IT entirely. The moat is thin against platform consolidation, but the Skills-as-shared-org-memory angle creates genuine workflow lock-in if they can get three or four critical workflows embedded — teams don't migrate away from things baked into their daily rhythm.

PM
No panel take
80/100 · ship

The job-to-be-done is clean and singular: stop rebuilding AI context every time a new person on your team needs to use it. The Skills layer nails this — one person builds the investor-update workflow, everyone else invokes it without touching a prompt. The incompleteness risk is the knowledge base: if documents go stale and agents cite outdated context, the product actively makes work worse, not better, and there's no visible mechanism for freshness signaling. But the onboarding path — connect a tool, build a Skill, deploy a Bot — has a credible three-step value arc that most AI workspaces bury under configuration screens.

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