Compare/display.dev vs Stet

AI tool comparison

display.dev vs Stet

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

D

Productivity

display.dev

Publish agent-generated HTML behind company auth in one command

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Display.dev is a micro-SaaS that solves a surprisingly annoying problem in agentic workflows: sharing AI-generated reports and dashboards securely inside a company. Claude, Cursor, and other agents increasingly produce polished HTML artifacts—analysis dashboards, design mockups, research reports—but sharing them means either copy-pasting into a doc tool or using Claude's built-in publish feature, which creates public URLs accessible to anyone on the internet. Display.dev fixes this with a single command: `dsp publish ./report.html`. The artifact lands at a permanent URL gated by Google, Microsoft, or company email authentication. Viewers sign in with their existing credentials; no account creation required on their end. The platform also surfaces inline comments back to the agent, meaning your agent can read feedback and iterate—closing a loop that previously required manual copy-paste between viewers and the AI tool. Pricing is simple: free tier for 10 gated artifacts, Solo at $15/month for unlimited, Pro at $49/month with SSO and audit logs, Enterprise at $499/month for large orgs. It also integrates with Claude Desktop via MCP, making it the kind of tool that becomes invisible infrastructure for teams already deep in agentic workflows. With Product Hunt ranking it #5 today and 134 upvotes, it's clearly striking a chord.

S

Productivity

Stet

Local macOS dictation that sounds like you — not like generic AI prose

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Stet is an open-source macOS dictation app that transcribes speech locally and then uses AI to clean up the output while actively preserving your personal writing style and tone. The core innovation is a voice model — a lightweight profile that learns from your past writing so the AI corrections don't flatten your voice into generic AI-ese. The result is meant to sound like you dictated it, not like it was passed through a generic LLM. The technical approach combines local Whisper-based transcription (nothing leaves your device during speech-to-text) with an optional AI refinement pass that can use your own API key (BYOK) or a $6.99/month subscription. The open-source release includes the voice profiling code, making it auditable and forkable. It's a direct response to Wispr Flow, which is closed-source and subscription-only. For writers, podcasters, and productivity users who dictate significant amounts of content, the voice preservation angle is genuinely differentiated. The proliferation of AI writing tools has created a recognizable 'AI voice' — flat, over-structured, and devoid of personality — that sophisticated readers are increasingly adept at detecting. Stet's bet is that preserving your actual voice is the most valuable thing an AI writing assistant can do.

Decision
display.dev
Stet
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free / $15 / $49 / $499/mo
Free (BYOK) / $6.99/mo
Best for
Publish agent-generated HTML behind company auth in one command
Local macOS dictation that sounds like you — not like generic AI prose
Category
Productivity
Productivity

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

The MCP integration with Claude Desktop is the real win—publish directly from the agent without leaving your workflow. The inline comment loop-back is clever: finally my agent can read stakeholder feedback without me playing telephone.

80/100 · ship

Open-source, local-first transcription with BYOK is the right architecture. I've been burned by voice tools that upload my audio to servers I can't audit. The voice profile approach for preserving style is technically interesting — I want to see how it handles domain-specific jargon and code-switching between formal and casual registers.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

At $15-49/month for what is essentially a static hosting service with auth, this feels expensive for teams who could achieve similar results with Cloudflare Access on top of R2 storage for a fraction of the cost. The moat here is thin.

45/100 · skip

The 'sounds like you' promise needs a lot of data to actually deliver — your voice profile is only as good as the writing samples it's trained on, and most people don't have a consistent, large corpus of their own writing. For casual dictators, this might just be Whisper with extra steps. Apple's built-in dictation is free and surprisingly good now.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Agent-generated artifacts becoming first-class organizational documents—reviewed, commented on, and iterated by agents—is a genuine shift in knowledge work. Display.dev is early infrastructure for that workflow. Simple, unglamorous, and necessary.

80/100 · ship

Voice-first computing is coming back, and the arms race for authentic AI writing assistance is heating up. The distinguishing factor won't be transcription accuracy — everyone has solved that — it will be voice fidelity. Stet is building in the right direction: local processing plus personal style models. Expect this architecture to be standard in two years.

Creator
80/100 · ship

Sharing design mockups or brand reports from agent sessions used to mean awkward public links or zip files. Gated permanent URLs that just work with company email login removes so much friction from client-facing creative deliverables.

80/100 · ship

This is genuinely exciting for writers and content creators. The homogenization of AI-assisted writing is a real aesthetic problem — everything starts sounding like the same LinkedIn post. A tool that actively fights that tendency by learning your specific voice is solving the right problem. Even if the voice model needs work, the direction is exactly right.

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