AI tool comparison
Cua vs Together AI Serverless Fine-Tuning
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Cua
Open-source infra for computer-use agents across Mac, Linux & Windows
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Cua is an open-source infrastructure toolkit for building, benchmarking, and deploying computer-use agents. It provides a unified environment where AI agents can control full desktops across macOS, Linux, and Windows — without stealing the user's cursor or disrupting their workflow. The project ships four components: Cua Driver (background automation for macOS apps), Cua Sandbox (a unified API for VM and container control), CuaBot (multi-agent CLI with native window integration), and Cua-Bench (a benchmark suite compatible with OSWorld and ScreenSpot). Lume, a VM manager optimized for Apple Silicon, rounds out the toolkit. With 15,000+ stars and an MIT license, Cua is quickly becoming the de facto standard for teams building autonomous computer-use pipelines. As agents graduate from chat to "just do the thing," infrastructure like Cua becomes load-bearing.
Developer Tools
Together AI Serverless Fine-Tuning
Upload dataset, train adapter, deploy endpoint — no infra required
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Together AI's serverless fine-tuning pipeline lets developers upload a dataset, train a LoRA adapter on top of open-source models, and deploy the result to a production-ready endpoint with a single click. No GPU provisioning, no infrastructure management, and no idle compute costs — you pay for training time and inference calls. It targets the gap between "use a base model via API" and "run your own fine-tuned model on dedicated hardware."
Reviewer scorecard
“Cua solves the hardest part of computer-use agents — getting a stable, reproducible environment that doesn't fight your OS. The background automation mode alone is worth it for devs building macOS agents. 15k stars in a short window is a strong signal.”
“The primitive here is clean: managed LoRA fine-tuning as a job queue, with the adapter automatically wired to a serverless inference endpoint on completion. That's a real workflow, not a demo. The DX bet is that developers would rather hand over infrastructure in exchange for less control over training hyperparameters — and for most teams shipping a product-specific classifier or instruction-tuned model, that's the right call. The moment of truth is uploading a JSONL file and hitting train; if that works without CUDA debugging, they've already beaten the weekend alternative. My one gripe: 'one-click deploy' is marketing language for what is actually a reasonable default routing step — call it what it is in the docs and I'm fully in.”
“Computer-use agents are still fragile — they miss UI state changes, struggle with dynamic content, and hallucinate element positions. Cua gives you infrastructure, not reliability. Until benchmark scores improve on diverse real-world tasks, this is a research toy with impressive packaging.”
“Direct competitors are Modal, Replicate, and AWS SageMaker JumpStart — all of which do managed fine-tuning with varying degrees of pain. Together's actual edge is their model catalog and the fact that the inference endpoint uses the same LoRA adapter without a cold-deploy step, which is a genuine workflow improvement over 'train elsewhere, deploy somewhere else.' Where this breaks: teams that need reproducible training runs with custom loss functions, or anyone wanting to fine-tune on proprietary architectures not in Together's catalog. The 12-month killer is Fireworks AI or Groq shipping identical functionality and undercutting on inference price — but until that happens, the integration between training and serving is doing real work here.”
“Every agentic workflow that touches a UI needs something like Cua. As models improve at visual understanding and cursor control, this infrastructure layer will be what production computer-use runs on. It's early, but it's exactly the right early.”
“The thesis this product bets on: by 2027, the majority of production LLM deployments will use fine-tuned open-weight models rather than general-purpose API calls, because task-specific models are cheaper per token at quality parity. That bet is riding the trend of open-weight model quality catching closed-model quality on narrow tasks — and that trend line is real, measurable, and accelerating. The second-order effect that matters is power redistribution: if fine-tuning becomes a 20-minute self-serve operation, model customization stops being a moat for AI-native companies and becomes a commodity expectation. The teams that lose are the ones selling 'we fine-tuned on your data' as a differentiator; the teams that win are the ones who now get that capability for free and compete on something else. Together is on-time to this trend, not early — but being on-time with solid execution in infrastructure is often enough.”
“If you're building an AI that can use Figma, Photoshop, or any creative tool on your behalf, Cua is the missing scaffolding. The benchmarking suite means you can actually measure how well your agent handles design tasks — not just hope.”
“The buyer is a startup ML engineer or a growth-stage company's platform team who can't justify a dedicated MLOps hire — this comes from the product or engineering budget, not a separate AI infrastructure line item. Pricing on consumption is correct; it aligns cost with usage and avoids the 'we trained once and now pay a monthly seat fee' problem that kills adoption. The moat question is the real one: Together's defensibility is the combination of model selection breadth plus the training-to-serving pipeline being a single product surface, which creates workflow lock-in even if per-token prices converge. The risk is that Hugging Face Inference Endpoints or AWS close this gap within 18 months, but right now Together is charging a reasonable premium for genuine convenience — that's a viable business.”
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