AI tool comparison
Dune vs Statewright
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Hardware
Dune
A 3-key CNC aluminum keypad that reads your context and adapts
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Dune is a tiny CNC-machined anodized aluminum keypad (40×10×10mm, 50g) from Project Mirage that ships three programmable physical keys alongside context-aware AI logic — automatically detecting your active macOS app and updating key assignments with no manual setup. It's the closest thing yet to a physical MCP client. The hardware handles the meetings problem elegantly: one-click join for Zoom, Teams, and Google Meet with calendar sync, dedicated mic/camera toggles, and instant meeting-window focus. But the broader promise is context adaptation: keys that behave differently when you're in your editor vs. your browser vs. your design tool, without you needing to define profiles. USB-C powered, macOS only, shipping in May 2026 with early bird pricing. Project Mirage has 8+ years of hardware experience and the form factor is genuinely minimal — a sliver of machined metal on your desk rather than another chunky macro pad. The open question is how deep the context awareness goes and whether the AI layer is smart enough to be useful rather than occasionally wrong and annoying. Early Product Hunt reception was strong (608 votes, top of leaderboard), suggesting there's real appetite for physical AI interfaces.
AI Infrastructure
Statewright
State machines that control exactly which tools your AI agent can touch
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Statewright takes a provocative stance on AI agent reliability: instead of making models smarter, restrict what they can do. The framework lets you define explicit state machines that determine which tools an agent can access at each phase of a workflow. During planning, agents get read-only tools. During implementation, edit tools unlock. During validation, only test commands are available. The philosophy is captured in a single line from the README: "Agents are suggestions, states are laws." The core engine is written in Rust for deterministic, zero-LLM evaluation of state transitions. Plugin layers integrate with agents via MCP (Model Context Protocol), enforcing tool restrictions at the protocol level across most major platforms. The framework is Apache 2.0 for its core engine, with FSL licensing for extended features (converting to Apache 2.0 in 2029, self-hosting allowed for developers and teams now). The team published SWE-bench results showing models jumping from 2/10 to 10/10 success rates on five tasks when Statewright constraints were applied—a striking claim that has the HN crowd both skeptical and intrigued. This is genuinely novel territory: rather than prompt engineering or fine-tuning, it's architectural guardrails enforced at runtime. For production agent deployments where agents interacting with dangerous tools (databases, file systems, APIs) need hard constraints, this fills a real gap. 53 stars so far, but the HN traction suggests it's about to pop.
Reviewer scorecard
“The primitive here is dead simple and correct: an HID device whose key mappings are driven by a macOS accessibility API hook watching the frontmost application — the AI layer handles the mapping logic so you don't write profiles by hand. That's the right DX bet. The moment of truth is day two, not day one: does the context inference hold up when you have twelve apps open and you're alt-tabbing between your editor and a Slack thread? If the answer is yes, this is the macro pad I'd actually leave plugged in. The specific decision that earns a ship from me is that they rejected the 'define every profile yourself' pattern that killed every Stream Deck workflow I've ever set up.”
“Rust deterministic engine enforcing MCP-level tool restrictions is exactly the kind of hard guarantee you need before letting an agent touch production databases. This is infrastructure, not a toy.”
“Direct competitor is the Stream Deck Mini plus a $10/yr Keyboard Maestro license, which already does context-aware macro switching with zero AI ambiguity. The specific scenario where Dune breaks is the one that happens constantly: two apps open side-by-side, ambiguous context, and three keys that do the wrong thing because the model guessed wrong — that's worse than a dumb macro pad, not better. What kills this in 12 months is Apple shipping Focus-mode-aware Shortcuts automation natively in macOS 16, at which point the software layer this hardware depends on is commoditized. To earn a ship: show me six months of real-world context accuracy data, not a Product Hunt leaderboard.”
“The SWE-bench jump from 2/10 to 10/10 on five tasks is too small a sample to generalize from. Rigid state machines may reduce agent flexibility in ways that create new failure modes—agents that get stuck because a valid path violates the state graph.”
“The thesis Dune is betting on: within three years, AI context awareness will be accurate enough that zero-configuration physical controls outperform manually-configured ones, and users will pay a hardware premium for that. That's a falsifiable claim riding a specific trend line — on-device app-state inference getting cheap enough to run as a background daemon — and Project Mirage is early, not late, to it. The second-order effect nobody is talking about: if this works, it inverts the macro pad market from a power-user niche into a normie peripheral, because the configuration tax that kept civilians away disappears. The future state where this is infrastructure is a desk where every physical control knows what you're doing without being told.”
“Formal methods for AI agents—think type systems but for behavior—is a research area that will matter enormously as agents enter regulated industries. Statewright is an early, practical instantiation of that idea. Watch this space.”
“The job-to-be-done is singular and clear: stop context-switching your hands when your screen context already switched. The meetings use case is the product's sharpest edge — calendar sync plus one-click join plus mic/camera toggles is a complete workflow replacement, not a feature — and that alone justifies the purchase for anyone on four-plus calls a day. The product has a real opinion: it decides your key assignments, you don't. That's brave and almost certainly right. The gap that would turn this ship into a skip is if the broader context-awareness layer — editor vs. browser vs. design tool — turns out to be shallow window-title matching dressed up as AI; ship the meetings story hard and make everything else a bonus.”
“For creative workflows where spontaneity matters, hard state machine constraints sound like they'd kill the magic. I'd rather have a guardrail-light agent that occasionally needs correction than one that asks permission to proceed at every step.”
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