AI tool comparison
Fly.io vs TurboQuant WASM
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Infrastructure
Fly.io
Deploy app servers close to your users globally
100%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Fly.io runs your app servers in data centers around the world, close to your users. Supports any Docker container, persistent storage, and GPU workloads. Popular for deploying full-stack apps and AI inference.
AI Infrastructure
TurboQuant WASM
6x vector compression in your browser — search compressed embeddings without unpacking
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
TurboQuant WASM ports the ICLR 2026 TurboQuant algorithm (Google Research) into a browser-native npm package using Zig, WASM, and WGSL compute shaders. It compresses embedding vectors ~6x (3–4.5 bits per dimension) and runs similarity search directly on compressed data — no decompression step. WebGPU acceleration delivers 30+ tok/s in Chrome. The demo shows Gemma 4 E2B generating Excalidraw diagrams from prompts with KV-cache compression cutting memory by 2.4x, enabling longer conversations inside browser GPU limits.
Reviewer scorecard
“For apps that need full server control — WebSocket servers, background workers, AI inference — Fly.io gives you the flexibility that serverless platforms don't.”
“Searching directly on compressed vectors without decompression is a real algorithmic win, not a marketing trick. The npm package with embedded WASM binary means integration is literally one import. The Excalidraw demo proving KV-cache compression in-browser is compelling proof that this works in production-like conditions.”
“The DX has improved massively but it's still more complex than Vercel. You need to understand Docker and infrastructure. Not for beginners.”
“Chrome 134+ and WebGPU requirement kills a significant fraction of potential users — Safari and iOS aren't supported at all. This is research-grade code with 264 stars, not a production library. Zig as the core language also means limited community support if something breaks.”
“Fly.io is the answer for workloads that don't fit the serverless model. As AI inference goes local-first, having servers in 30+ regions matters.”
“Browser-native LLM inference with compressed KV-caches is the path to private, local AI that actually fits in commodity hardware. TurboQuant is solving a memory wall problem that will matter more as models get longer context windows. The ICLR 2026 backing means the math is sound.”
“The Excalidraw diagram demo is legitimately impressive as a creative tool — prompt to architecture diagram in seconds, no server required. But until Safari/iOS support lands, this is a power-user curiosity. Most creative workflows aren't running on Chrome 134+ with WebGPU enabled.”
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