AI tool comparison
CodeBurn vs LiteRT-LM
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
CodeBurn
Track and cut your AI coding spend across every tool you use
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
CodeBurn is a terminal TUI dashboard that reads AI coding session data directly from disk — no API keys, proxies, or wrappers required — and surfaces a breakdown of token costs across Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, GitHub Copilot, and more. It auto-classifies activity into 13 categories (coding, debugging, testing, refactoring, etc.) and shows one-shot success rates per task type, giving developers a rare look at where their AI spend actually goes. The dashboard includes gradient charts, keyboard navigation, multiple time periods, and a currency converter supporting 162 ISO 4217 currencies. There's also an "optimize" command that scans sessions for waste patterns and outputs actionable, copy-paste fixes. For teams, a macOS menu bar app surfaces daily costs at a glance. With 2.7k stars after a Show HN post, CodeBurn clearly scratched a real itch. As AI coding budgets scale from hundreds to thousands of dollars per developer per month, tooling that makes costs visible and actionable becomes less optional and more essential.
Developer Tools
LiteRT-LM
Google's open-source engine for LLMs on phones, browsers & IoT
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
LiteRT-LM is Google AI Edge's production-grade open-source inference framework for running large language models directly on edge devices — Android phones, iPhones, web browsers via WebAssembly, and IoT hardware. It powers the on-device GenAI features in Chrome, Chromebook Plus, and Pixel Watch that Google launched alongside Gemma 4. The framework supports a wide model zoo including Gemma, Llama, Phi-4, and Qwen, with quantization pipelines that fit models onto hardware as constrained as a wearable. It also supports function calling and tool use, enabling lightweight agentic workflows without a cloud round-trip. A JavaScript API makes browser integration straightforward for web developers. LiteRT-LM represents Google's answer to Apple Intelligence's on-device approach — an open, cross-platform runtime rather than a proprietary stack. The fact that it's open-sourced means any developer can ship private, offline AI features without touching Google's servers, which matters enormously for healthcare, finance, and enterprise applications.
Reviewer scorecard
“This is exactly the observability layer AI coding has been missing. Knowing that 40% of my Claude Code tokens went to a single poorly-scoped context window is the kind of insight that pays for itself in the first week. The 'optimize' command is genuinely useful, not just marketing copy.”
“A unified inference runtime across Android, iOS, browser, and IoT with function calling support is exactly what the edge AI ecosystem has been missing. The WebAssembly path alone opens up private on-device AI in any browser without installing anything. Ship this immediately.”
“The multi-provider claim is impressive on paper, but Cursor and Copilot don't expose session data the same way Claude Code does. Expect incomplete data for non-Anthropic tools until the provider ecosystem standardizes telemetry formats. Also: if your team uses ephemeral dev containers, good luck getting disk reads to work.”
“Edge inference is still severely constrained — even quantized Gemma 3B on a phone gives you a noticeably worse experience than cloud APIs. Google's history with edge AI frameworks is also mixed: TensorFlow Lite, ML Kit, MediaPipe all launched with fanfare and then got inconsistent maintenance.”
“Cost observability is the missing infrastructure layer for the AI-native development era. Just as APM tools like Datadog became mandatory once cloud costs mattered, AI coding cost tracking will be table stakes within 18 months. CodeBurn is an early mover in a category that will consolidate around one or two dominant players.”
“This is infrastructure for the next decade. When models run on-device with no latency and no data leaving the device, entirely new categories of ambient, private AI become possible. LiteRT-LM is the missing runtime layer for that world — and Google open-sourcing it means the ecosystem builds around it rather than around Apple.”
“The TUI design is clean and keyboard-navigable in a way most developer dashboards aren't. Gradient charts inside a terminal window sounds tacky but actually reads well. The category breakdown would make a genuinely compelling weekly standup artifact for teams trying to improve AI workflow discipline.”
“Offline AI for creative apps is a game-changer — imagine Procreate or Figma with on-device generative features that work on a plane. The browser WebAssembly support means I can prototype these ideas without an app store or backend. Very excited about the creative possibilities here.”
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