Compare/Cursor 1.5 vs QuickCompare

AI tool comparison

Cursor 1.5 vs QuickCompare

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

Cursor 1.5

AI code editor now runs agents in the background while you do other things

Ship

100%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Cursor 1.5 is a major update to the AI-native code editor that introduces background agent execution, letting long-running coding tasks continue without keeping the IDE in focus. The update also ships shared team-level rules for enterprise accounts, a revamped memory panel, and measurable latency improvements for autocomplete. Together these features push Cursor from an interactive pair-programmer toward something closer to an asynchronous coding collaborator.

Q

Developer Tools

QuickCompare

Compare LLMs on your own data — not someone else's benchmarks

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

QuickCompare is Trismik's model evaluation platform that lets AI/ML teams test multiple LLMs against their own production data in a consistent, repeatable way. Instead of relying on generic leaderboards like MMLU or HumanEval, teams upload their actual prompts and evaluate models side-by-side across quality, cost, latency, and reliability. The tool replaces ad hoc scripts and spreadsheets with a structured workflow: pick your models, run evals, get a clear decision matrix. It works with GPT-5.2, Claude Opus 4.5, Gemini 3 Pro, Llama 4, and dozens of others via a unified API harness. In an era where model choice directly impacts engineering budgets, QuickCompare gives teams the evidence they need to justify switching (or staying). Particularly useful when a cheaper model performs identically on your workload — the savings can be substantial.

Decision
Cursor 1.5
QuickCompare
Panel verdict
Ship · 4 ship / 0 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free tier / $20/mo Pro / $40/mo Business / Enterprise custom
Freemium
Best for
AI code editor now runs agents in the background while you do other things
Compare LLMs on your own data — not someone else's benchmarks
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
87/100 · ship

The primitive here is asynchronous agent execution decoupled from IDE focus — finally, you can kick off a refactor or test-writing task and context-switch without the whole thing dying. The DX bet is correct: the complexity is hidden in the runtime, not pushed onto the developer via config or orchestration boilerplate. The moment of truth is queuing a multi-file task, closing the tab, and coming back to a diff — and apparently it survives that test. Shared team rules is the feature that actually earns the enterprise tier: replacing the tribal knowledge of per-developer .cursorrules files with a versioned, shared config is the kind of mundane-but-real problem that unlocks actual team adoption. The autocomplete latency improvement is the only claim I'd want benchmarks on before citing it.

80/100 · ship

Finally a tool that stops the 'which model is best?' debate cold. Running your actual prompts through all the candidates and getting a cost/quality matrix is exactly what every engineering team needs right now. The switch from gut feel to data is overdue.

Skeptic
78/100 · ship

Background agent execution is the one feature that separates Cursor from GitHub Copilot in a meaningful, non-cosmetic way — Copilot hasn't shipped async task delegation at the IDE level, and that gap is real enough to matter today. The scenario where this breaks is multi-repo or monorepo tasks that cross service boundaries: background agents operating on partial context without a human in the loop will produce confident wrong diffs, and the memory panel won't save you there. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's OpenAI or Anthropic shipping native IDE integrations with the same async primitive baked into their own tooling, collapsing the moat. But right now, the team rules feature alone justifies the Business tier for any eng team above 10 people, so this ships.

45/100 · skip

Evals are only as good as your test set, and most teams don't have one that actually reflects production variance. If you're running QuickCompare on 50 cherry-picked prompts, you're fooling yourself. The tooling is fine; the false confidence it creates is the real risk.

Founder
82/100 · ship

The buyer here is clear: VP Eng or CTO at a 20-200 person company, paid from the dev tooling budget, justified by reduced context-switching cost and standardized AI behavior across the team. Shared team rules is the expansion revenue mechanism — it's the feature that converts individual Pro subscribers into Business accounts, and that's a real land-and-expand wedge built into the product itself rather than bolted on by a sales team. The moat question is harder: Anysphere's defensibility depends on workflow lock-in through memory and rules accumulation, which gets stickier the longer a team uses it, but the underlying model access is still commoditized. The risk is that VS Code's own AI layer catches up fast enough that the switching cost never fully sets. For now, the unit economics on the Business tier are credible.

No panel take
Futurist
84/100 · ship

The thesis Cursor 1.5 is betting on: within two years, developers will manage fleets of concurrent async coding tasks rather than typing code themselves, and the IDE becomes a task dispatcher rather than a text editor. Background agent execution is the first real infrastructure bet on that trajectory — not a demo, an actual runtime change. The dependency that has to hold is that agents remain good enough to be trusted with multi-step tasks but not so good that the IDE layer becomes irrelevant entirely; Cursor is threading a specific needle in that window. The second-order effect nobody is talking about: shared team rules start to function as organizational AI policy, meaning the eng team — not IT, not legal — becomes the de facto owner of how AI behaves in the codebase. That's a power shift worth watching. Cursor is early on the async-agent trend line and building the right primitives for it.

80/100 · ship

Model selection is becoming a strategic moat. Teams that optimize cost-per-task now will compound those savings as they scale agent workloads. QuickCompare is the kind of boring-but-essential tooling that separates efficient AI orgs from ones burning cash on the prestige model.

Creator
No panel take
80/100 · ship

As someone who swaps models constantly for creative pipelines — image captions, copy generation, transcript summarization — having a structured way to test them on my actual prompts is genuinely useful. Stopped manually comparing outputs in tabs.

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