AI tool comparison
Coasts vs Gemini CLI
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Coasts
Containerized sandboxes for running AI agents safely in production
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Coasts (Containerized Hosts for Agents) is an open-source infrastructure layer that solves one of the practical problems of running AI agents in production: safe, isolated execution environments. When an agent needs to browse the web, execute code, access files, or call external APIs, it needs a sandbox that prevents it from accidentally (or intentionally) doing damage to the host system or other agents. Coasts provides a lightweight, Docker-based hosting layer with per-agent isolation and configurable capability grants. The core abstraction is the "coast" — a container configuration that specifies exactly what an agent can and cannot access: which file paths are readable or writable, which network endpoints can be called, what CPU/memory limits apply, and how long the agent can run. Agents are spun up in these containers on demand and torn down after completion, providing strong isolation with minimal overhead. The configuration is declarative (YAML-based) and composable, making it easy to define agent capability profiles. With 98 points on Hacker News and 39 comments — one of the higher engagement rates in the agent infrastructure space — Coasts is hitting a real need. As more teams build agent pipelines in production, the question of "what happens when the agent does something unexpected" becomes critical. Container-based isolation is the proven answer from the broader DevOps world, and Coasts applies it specifically to the agentic AI context.
Developer Tools
Gemini CLI
Google's free open-source AI agent lives in your terminal
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Gemini CLI is Google's official open-source terminal AI agent, giving developers a free command-line interface to Google's Gemini models with a 1M token context window. It's positioned as a direct competitor to Claude Code and GitHub Copilot in the terminal — with the key differentiator of being genuinely free: 60 requests/minute and 1,000 requests/day with a personal Google account at no cost. The tool ships with built-in Google Search grounding (so answers are based on live web data), file operations, shell command execution, and web fetching. It supports MCP (Model Context Protocol) for custom integrations and has a ReAct-style loop for multi-step agentic tasks. The GitHub repo has already crossed 100k stars with 5,700+ commits, weekly stable releases, and daily nightly builds — it's clearly a priority product for Google. What makes this significant is that Google is directly funding a Claude Code/Codex-style experience with their Gemini 3 models, available free at substantial usage levels. For developers who want to try agentic terminal coding without committing to paid plans, Gemini CLI is now a serious option. The Apache 2.0 license makes it fully open for integration and modification.
Reviewer scorecard
“The declarative capability grants are exactly what I want — specify what an agent can touch and nothing more, spun up in a container with resource limits. This is the infrastructure pattern for production-safe agent deployment. YAML-based config means it slots naturally into existing IaC workflows.”
“1,000 free requests per day is genuinely useful for hobbyist and side-project work. The built-in Google Search grounding is a killer feature for research tasks — Claude Code can't do that without MCP plugins. Active release cadence with weekly stable releases is reassuring.”
“Container isolation is standard infrastructure work, and there are already several competing approaches (E2B, Modal, Daytona) with more polish and enterprise backing. Starting a new OSS project in this space faces real network effects headwinds. The real question is what Coasts offers that existing solutions don't.”
“Google's track record of killing developer products is legendary. With 2,700+ open issues and Claude Code already dominating mindshare, this may just be a defensive move rather than a committed product. Gemini 3 still lags Claude 4 on complex coding benchmarks.”
“The agent execution environment is going to become as important as the agent itself. As AI agents take real actions in the world — browsing, coding, executing — the infrastructure for capability isolation determines what's safe to automate. Coasts' open-source approach is important for avoiding vendor lock-in in this critical layer.”
“Google is the only player that can bundle AI terminal tooling with live search grounding at scale. If they follow through on GitHub Actions integration, this becomes a default layer in millions of CI/CD pipelines — a distribution advantage nobody else has.”
“Deep DevOps infrastructure work — not relevant to creative workflows unless you're running a production AI system. The people who need this will know they need it; everyone else should wait for higher-level abstractions that hide the container complexity.”
“The free tier makes it the obvious recommendation for creators and indie builders who want AI coding assistance but can't justify $20/month subscriptions. Getting started requires just a Google account — zero friction onboarding.”
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