Compare/Cua vs Litmus

AI tool comparison

Cua vs Litmus

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

C

Developer Tools

Cua

Open-source infra for AI agents that actually control computers — Mac, Linux, Windows, Android

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Cua is an open-source platform for building, running, and benchmarking AI agents that autonomously control computer interfaces. It provides a unified sandbox API that lets agents capture screenshots, move the mouse, type, and interact with native applications across Linux containers, VMs, macOS, Windows, and Android — all through a single consistent interface regardless of platform. The toolkit ships five components: Cua Sandbox (cross-platform agent execution), Cua Driver (background macOS automation that doesn't steal focus), Lume (macOS/Linux VM management on Apple Silicon via Apple's Virtualization Framework), CuaBot (CLI for running Claude Code and OpenClaw agents inside isolated sandboxes with native window rendering), and Cua-Bench (evaluation suite covering OSWorld, ScreenSpot, and Windows Arena benchmarks with trajectory export for training datasets). With 14.2k GitHub stars and 465 releases, Cua has quietly become the default infrastructure layer for developers building serious computer-use agents. It's trending again in April 2026 as the launch of Cursor 3's background agents and OpenAI's operator-style tooling sends developers looking for local, controllable sandboxes that don't phone home.

L

Developer Tools

Litmus

Unit tests for AI — find the cheapest model that passes your prompts

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Litmus is an open-source testing framework for AI prompts — the missing unit test layer between "it worked once" and "it works reliably across models." You define test cases (prompt + expected behavior assertions), run them against multiple models simultaneously, and Litmus reports which models pass and — crucially — projects the cost difference at scale. The goal: find the cheapest model that meets your quality bar. The workflow is intentionally simple: litmus init to scaffold a test suite, write YAML test cases describing prompt inputs and assertions, then litmus run to execute against your chosen model roster. Results show pass/fail per model, inference latency, and a cost-at-scale projection (e.g., "using claude-haiku instead of opus would cost 94% less at 1M requests/day with 97.3% pass rate"). This directly addresses one of the most expensive habits in AI development: defaulting to the most capable (and most costly) model for every task. Litmus launched fresh with 74 GitHub stars in its first hours, suggesting real demand. It integrates with the Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google APIs and supports custom model endpoints for local testing.

Decision
Cua
Litmus
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source (MIT)
Open Source / Free
Best for
Open-source infra for AI agents that actually control computers — Mac, Linux, Windows, Android
Unit tests for AI — find the cheapest model that passes your prompts
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

Cua is the plumbing that makes computer-use agents actually work in production. The fact that Cua Driver handles background macOS automation without stealing focus is the detail that separates a demo from something you can ship. 465 releases means this is battle-tested infrastructure, not a weekend project.

80/100 · ship

Every production AI team needs this and most are doing it manually with spreadsheets. The cost projection feature alone is worth shipping — I've watched teams spend 10x more than necessary on inference because they never systematically tested cheaper models. This is the tooling that makes responsible model selection practical.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

Computer-use agents are still fragile — UI changes in target apps silently break automation in ways that are hard to detect. The benchmark suite evaluates on static tasks, not real-world drift. And running full VMs per agent session has serious cost implications at scale. The infra is solid; the fundamental computer-use problem isn't solved.

45/100 · skip

The fundamental challenge with prompt testing is that assertions are hard to write well — defining 'correct' AI behavior is often subjective and context-dependent. New project with 74 stars means no battle-testing, no community-contributed assertion patterns, and no guarantee the test framework won't produce false confidence. Wait for v1.0 with real-world case studies.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Cross-platform sandboxed execution is the prerequisite for every autonomous agent use case that isn't purely API-based. Cua normalizes the surface that agents operate on — once that layer stabilizes, the agents themselves can improve rapidly without infrastructure churn. This is foundational scaffolding for the agent era.

80/100 · ship

Litmus represents the maturation of AI development as a discipline — the shift from 'does it work?' to 'does it work reliably, cheaply, and measurably?' This is how software engineering grew up in the 2000s, and AI is following the same path. Tools like this will be table stakes in 18 months.

Creator
80/100 · ship

I used Cua to build an agent that fills in repetitive design tool tasks — font checks, asset exports, spacing audits. The background automation on macOS is surprisingly clean. It's opened up automation use cases I assumed required paid SaaS.

80/100 · ship

Brand voice consistency is one of the hardest problems in AI-assisted content creation. Litmus-style testing against creative prompts — does this output match our tone guidelines? — is something agencies and marketing teams desperately need. The model cost comparison feature makes budget conversations with clients much cleaner.

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