AI tool comparison
Google AI Edge Gallery vs Notion AI Automations
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Mobile
Google AI Edge Gallery
Gemma 4 on your phone, offline, with agentic skills — no cloud needed
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Google AI Edge Gallery is a mobile app that lets anyone run powerful open-source LLMs — primarily Gemma 4 — directly on their Android or iOS device with zero internet connectivity. The April 2026 update brought full Gemma 4 support including the E2B edge variant optimized for sub-1.5GB RAM, alongside new Agent Skills that enable multi-step autonomous workflows entirely on-device. The app goes well beyond a chat interface. Users get Thinking Mode to watch the model's reasoning process in real time, multimodal features for image analysis and voice transcription, a Prompt Lab for experimentation, and Tiny Garden — an interactive game driven purely by on-device natural language understanding. Hugging Face integration lets users import custom models beyond the curated defaults. The significance of the April 7 release is timing: it dropped the same day as LiteRT-LM and coincides with Gemma 4's general availability, creating a complete stack from framework to end-user app. With 899 GitHub stars gained in a single day and app store availability on both iOS and Android, Edge Gallery is becoming the reference showcase for what on-device AI looks like in 2026.
Productivity
Notion AI Automations
Build multi-step AI agents inside Notion — no code required
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Notion AI Automations lets users build multi-step AI agents that trigger on database changes, schedule tasks, send Slack messages, draft documents, and call external APIs — all without writing code. It extends Notion's existing automation system with AI reasoning steps, making it possible to chain LLM actions with real-world integrations inside a workspace most teams already live in. It's AI-integrated into an existing product rather than a greenfield AI tool.
Reviewer scorecard
“The Agent Skills addition is the headline. Running multi-step agentic workflows on a phone with no API calls is something developers have been wanting to demo to clients. The Kotlin codebase is well-structured enough that it serves as a useful reference implementation too.”
“The primitive here is: a visual workflow engine that injects LLM steps between database triggers and HTTP calls — basically Zapier with an AI node, living inside your wiki. The DX bet is that no-code is the right abstraction layer, which means the moment of truth is 'can I actually call my API with a structured payload and handle errors?' — and based on the blog post, there's no answer to that. There's no repo, no webhook schema docs, no failure-state handling described anywhere. A competent engineer would wire this up in an n8n self-hosted instance in an afternoon with more control, better observability, and no per-seat AI tax. Skipping until there's real documentation that treats the user like an adult.”
“Even the E2B variant struggles on older devices and drains battery fast during extended sessions. The model roster is Gemma-heavy by design, which limits utility for developers invested in other model families. This is a showcase app more than a daily driver.”
“The direct competitors here are Zapier with OpenAI steps, Make.com, and n8n — all of which have been doing multi-step AI automations for over a year with more connectors, better error handling, and dedicated automation UX. Notion's differentiation is that the data is already there in the database, which is a real advantage for maybe 20% of use cases — the ones where your trigger and your context both live in Notion. The scenario where this breaks is the moment a user tries to do anything that requires a conditional branch or structured output parsing, at which point they're back in a Zapier tab anyway. What kills this in 12 months: Notion's core product is a notes app fighting to become a database, and every distraction into agent-land delays fixing the actual broken things (sync, performance, offline). To earn a ship, it needs to demonstrate it handles failures gracefully and show me one workflow that legitimately can't be done better elsewhere.”
“Putting agentic AI in every pocket without a subscription or data plan is a genuine democratization moment. As mobile silicon improves, Edge Gallery represents where all smartphone AI is heading — the privacy and latency benefits of on-device will eventually make cloud-dependent AI feel antiquated.”
“Image analysis and voice transcription working fully offline is immediately useful on shoots or at events where connectivity is spotty. The Prompt Lab is a great scratchpad for refining prompts before committing them to a production pipeline.”
“The job-to-be-done is specific and real: 'automatically process information that lands in my Notion database without leaving the tool my team already uses.' That's a coherent single job, and Notion has a genuine distribution advantage — teams already live here, so the activation energy to automate is dramatically lower than adopting a separate workflow tool. The onboarding concern is real: building your first automation probably takes more than 2 minutes and requires understanding Notion's database model first, so non-power-users may stall. But the product has a genuine opinion — automation should live where the data lives — and that opinionated stance is the right call for a productivity suite audience. Ship with the caveat that the completeness story depends entirely on how many external integrations ship at launch.”
“The buyer is already in the room — teams paying for Notion AI at $10/member/mo just got their tier meaningfully upgraded, which is the right way to expand ARPU without a new pricing conversation. The moat is workflow lock-in: every automation a team builds in Notion is another reason not to migrate to Linear or Confluence, and that's a real switching cost that accumulates over time. The stress test is: what happens when Microsoft Copilot or Google Workspace ships equivalent automation for free to enterprise customers already paying for their suite? Notion's answer has to be 'we're faster to configure and the data model is more flexible,' which is a thin moat but a real one for the SMB segment they actually own. This isn't a transformative business move, but it's a competent defensive one that justifies the AI add-on price for another billing cycle.”
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