AI tool comparison
CoAgentor vs PromptPaste
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Productivity
CoAgentor
AI agents that speak live in your meetings — not just transcribe them
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
CoAgentor moves AI beyond meeting summaries into active participation: AI agents join your live calls, listen to the conversation, and when they have relevant data or an answer, they raise their hand and speak. Built by Josh Torrey, it launched on Product Hunt today with a free tier. The distinction from tools like Otter.ai or Fireflies is fundamental. Those tools are recorders. CoAgentor is a participant — it surfaces data points, answers factual questions, and can be configured with domain-specific knowledge so it responds as a subject-matter expert in real time. Imagine a sales call where your agent pulls up deal history the moment a client mentions a past project, or an engineering standup where the agent flags a dependency conflict as it's discussed. This sits at the intersection of two fast-moving trends: voice-first AI interfaces (driven by GPT-4o's real-time voice and Gemini Live) and agentic tool use. CoAgentor is an early implementation of what will likely become table stakes in enterprise communication tools — AI participants who contribute rather than just record.
Productivity
PromptPaste
Your private AI prompt library — one hotkey away on Mac, iPhone, iPad
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
PromptPaste is a native Apple app that lets you save, organize, and instantly paste AI prompts from a Mac menu bar overlay or iOS share sheet. Hit ⌘⇧P anywhere on Mac and your entire prompt library is accessible without switching apps or hunting through notes. The app supports dynamic templates using {{variable}} placeholders so prompts can be customized at paste-time, folder-based organization, iCloud sync across all Apple devices, and link-based sharing of prompt collections. Crucially, everything is stored locally — no account required, no cloud sync of your actual prompts outside of iCloud. Built by indie developer Ivan Terehin, PromptPaste fills a genuine gap: most people accumulate dozens of AI prompts scattered across notes, docs, and chat history. Works with every major AI platform — ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, Midjourney, GitHub Copilot, and more.
Reviewer scorecard
“Real-time voice participation in meetings is a genuinely different category than transcription. The use case for a technical agent that flags code issues or pulls up documentation during an engineering discussion is immediately valuable. Free tier makes it worth testing today.”
“The ⌘⇧P hotkey that drops your prompt library anywhere is the feature I didn't know I needed. I have system prompts, code review templates, and git commit formats that I paste constantly — having them one keystroke away instead of buried in Notion is a real productivity win.”
“An AI that speaks unbidden in meetings is a social nightmare waiting to happen. The latency, false positive rate, and awkward interruptions could tank team trust fast. And who controls when it talks? Until the UX around agent participation is much more refined, this will cause more chaos than value.”
“This is a well-executed clipboard manager with an AI marketing angle, not really AI itself. Raycast and Alfred already do this with snippet libraries, and most power users are already in those ecosystems. The Apple-only constraint also limits its audience significantly.”
“Within three years, having an AI participant in important meetings will be as normal as screen sharing. CoAgentor is one of the first serious attempts to define what that participation looks like. The teams that figure out agent-meeting UX now will have a significant advantage.”
“Personal prompt libraries are the new dotfiles — the accumulated knowledge of how to get AI tools to work for your specific workflows. Apps like PromptPaste are the beginning of a whole category of 'AI configuration layer' tools that will become essential infrastructure.”
“Creative meetings and brainstorms thrive on ambiguity and free association — having an AI interject with data points can kill that energy. The use case feels narrow: structured, information-dense meetings work; creative or sensitive discussions definitely don't.”
“For creators who use AI daily across writing, image generation, and video tools, having a single organized library across Mac and iPhone with variable templating is exactly the kind of workflow glue that saves an hour a week.”
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