AI tool comparison
GalaxyBrain vs Rowboat
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Productivity
GalaxyBrain
A local-first information OS — live variables, formulas, and built-in MCP support
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
GalaxyBrain is a local-first information operating system that combines a structured editor, a database, and a simple programming language into a single no-account tool. Pages aren't static documents — they contain live variables and formulas that auto-update, with all data stored as structured JSON on your filesystem. Think Notion meets a spreadsheet runtime, but entirely local and offline by default. The developer-facing hook is its built-in MCP (Model Context Protocol) tool, which makes GalaxyBrain directly addressable by AI coding assistants like Claude Code. An agent can read, write, and query your GalaxyBrain workspace the same way it would a filesystem or database — making it a compelling personal knowledge base substrate for AI-augmented workflows. The local JSON storage means no vendor lock-in and full data portability. GalaxyBrain launched quietly on Product Hunt today with 86 upvotes. Its "no account required" positioning and local-first architecture are resonating with privacy-conscious developers who've grown wary of SaaS tools that vacuum up personal data for AI training. The built-in MCP support in particular sets it apart from comparable tools like Obsidian or Notion.
Productivity
Rowboat
Local-first AI coworker with persistent knowledge graph, no cloud lock-in
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Rowboat is a local-first, open-source AI coworker that connects to your email and meeting notes, builds a persistent Obsidian-compatible knowledge graph from them, and uses that context to draft documents, meeting briefs, slide decks, and emails. It works with local models via Ollama or LM Studio, or with hosted APIs, and supports MCP for connecting external tools. The design philosophy is deliberately anti-cloud: all data stays in plain text Markdown files you can read, grep, and version-control. The knowledge graph is transparent — you can open it in Obsidian and see exactly what the AI knows about you. No black-box embeddings in a proprietary vector store, no "trust us with your emails" data agreements. Rowboat implements what Karpathy described as a "long-term memory coworker" — an AI that compounds value over time because it actually knows your history, your projects, and your terminology. TypeScript codebase, Apache 2.0 license, surging on GitHub trending this week.
Reviewer scorecard
“The MCP integration is the killer feature — I can use Claude Code to query and update my personal knowledge base without any manual copy-paste. Local-first JSON storage means I own my data and can version-control it. This is the personal knowledge tool I've been looking for.”
“Plain-text persistence + MCP + local model support is the right architecture. It'll survive AI winters and API deprecations. The Obsidian compatibility alone is a killer feature for the PKM crowd that already lives in that ecosystem.”
“Local-first tools live or die by their sync story. Right now GalaxyBrain appears to be single-machine — no mention of cross-device sync, collaboration, or mobile access. For a solo dev that's fine, but the moment you need to access your notes from your phone, this breaks down.”
“The 'knowledge graph from email' promise is where these tools historically fall apart — noisy inboxes produce noisy graphs. And 'local-first' often means 'labor-intensive setup.' The abstraction is right but execution on messy real-world data is hard. Watch the 1-month reviews.”
“MCP is quietly becoming the standard interface between AI agents and personal information stores. A tool that natively supports it as a first-class feature — while keeping data local — represents the right architecture for an AI-augmented future where you remain in control.”
“Personal knowledge infrastructure that you own is becoming the moat in AI-augmented work. Rowboat's transparent, portable approach builds durable value. In two years the question won't be which AI assistant you use, but which knowledge graph underlies it.”
“Live variables and formulas in a writing tool are genuinely novel for non-technical creatives managing complex projects. Being able to have a word count goal that updates automatically, or reference a character list that stays consistent across documents, is compelling.”
“Drafting meeting briefs and decks from accumulated context is the workflow I've wanted for years. The Obsidian integration means my notes and my AI context stay in sync naturally — no separate import/export dance.”
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