AI tool comparison
GLM-5V-Turbo vs SkillClaw
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
GLM-5V-Turbo
Converts design mockups to frontend code, beats Claude at Design2Code
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
GLM-5V-Turbo is Z.ai (Zhipu AI)'s native multimodal vision coding model, featuring 744 billion total parameters with 40 billion active through Mixture-of-Experts routing, trained on 28.5 trillion tokens. Its headline capability is converting UI design mockups, screenshots, and wireframes directly into executable, production-quality front-end code. On the Design2Code benchmark, GLM-5V-Turbo scores 94.8 — significantly ahead of Claude Opus 4.6's 77.3 and GPT-5.4's 89.1. It supports a 200K context window, is available via OpenRouter, and offers an open-weights release for self-hosting. The model handles React, Vue, HTML/CSS, and Tailwind output formats and can iterate based on visual feedback. The model addresses one of the most tedious parts of frontend development: translating static designs into clean code. Rather than treating it as a vision-QA task, GLM-5V-Turbo was trained specifically on design-code pairs, giving it a different capability profile than general-purpose multimodal models. For frontend developers and design agencies, this directly competes with tools like v0 and Galileo.
Developer Tools
SkillClaw
Multi-agent skill evolution that improves from every user's interactions
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
SkillClaw is a research framework from Alibaba's AMAP-ML team that enables collective skill evolution for LLM agent systems deployed at scale. The core idea: instead of each user's agent interactions existing in isolation, SkillClaw aggregates anonymized skill-improvement signals across all users to continuously refine a shared library of reusable agent skills — without requiring centralized fine-tuning. The framework introduces a three-component architecture: a Skill Extractor that identifies and catalogs atomic capabilities from interactions, a Skill Evolver that proposes improvements based on aggregate feedback, and a Skill Selector that routes tasks to the best-available skill version per user context. Published on April 9 and hitting #1 on Hugging Face trending papers this week with 277 upvotes, the paper reports significant improvements over per-user baselines on complex multi-step agentic tasks. This matters especially for production agent deployments where cold-start problems are severe — a new user's agent immediately benefits from millions of prior interactions. It's a fundamentally different model of agent improvement than either fine-tuning (expensive, periodic) or RAG (retrieval-only, no learning).
Reviewer scorecard
“A 94.8 Design2Code score that outperforms Claude at roughly 1/3 the inference cost is a genuine benchmark breakthrough. Open weights mean I can self-host this for a design-to-code pipeline inside my company without paying per-call API fees. Testing immediately.”
“The cold-start problem for agents is genuinely painful in enterprise deployments — new users get a dumb agent until they've accumulated history. SkillClaw's collective approach is the right architecture fix. I'm watching how it handles skill drift and version conflicts before betting on it.”
“Design2Code benchmarks measure pixel similarity, not code maintainability or real-world usability. Generated frontend code is often structurally messy even when it looks right visually. Also, 744B total parameters means serious self-hosting requirements — most teams will end up on the API anyway.”
“This is a research paper with a GitHub repo, not a production system. The evaluation is on academic benchmarks, not messy real-world multi-tenant deployments. And 'anonymous aggregation' of user interactions raises serious data governance questions for enterprise contexts.”
“The competitive implication here is massive: Chinese labs are shipping specialized models that beat GPT and Claude on task-specific benchmarks, with open weights. Design-to-code being commoditized means the value moves entirely to design systems and product thinking. This accelerates the designer-as-architect role.”
“Collective intelligence for agent skill libraries is the natural endgame for the agent ecosystem. This is essentially 'PageRank for agent capabilities' — the more users interact, the smarter the shared skill base becomes. If this architecture scales, it makes incumbent agent platforms defensible through network effects.”
“I've been waiting for a model that truly understands the gap between a Figma frame and actual HTML. 94.8 on Design2Code is the kind of score that changes how I work — I can prototype in Figma, export a screenshot, and have the model generate a working component in under a minute.”
“Too deep in the infrastructure layer for most creators. Interesting architecture, but until this is embedded in tools we actually use day-to-day, there's nothing actionable here for a content or design workflow.”
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