Compare/Greptile Code Review Agent vs SAM 3 (Segment Anything Model 3)

AI tool comparison

Greptile Code Review Agent vs SAM 3 (Segment Anything Model 3)

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

G

Developer Tools

Greptile Code Review Agent

Codebase-aware PR reviews that catch what lint misses

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Greptile's Code Review Agent integrates with GitHub and GitLab to automatically post PR review comments that go beyond static analysis, leveraging full codebase context to flag architectural inconsistencies, logic errors, and pattern violations. It indexes your entire repository so it can reason about how a change fits into the broader system, not just whether the diff itself is syntactically correct. It operates autonomously on each new PR, posting inline comments without requiring manual invocation.

S

Developer Tools

SAM 3 (Segment Anything Model 3)

Open-source real-time video & 3D segmentation from Meta AI

Ship

100%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

SAM 3 is Meta's open-source segmentation model that extends the original Segment Anything Model with real-time video segmentation and preliminary 3D point-cloud support. Weights and a demo API are available immediately on Meta's GitHub repository, making it a zero-cost primitive for computer vision pipelines. It targets researchers, CV engineers, and application developers who need robust, promptable segmentation without training their own models.

Decision
Greptile Code Review Agent
SAM 3 (Segment Anything Model 3)
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 4 ship / 0 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free tier available / Paid plans from ~$20/mo (contact sales for enterprise)
Free / Open-source (Apache 2.0)
Best for
Codebase-aware PR reviews that catch what lint misses
Open-source real-time video & 3D segmentation from Meta AI
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
78/100 · ship

The primitive is: an LLM with a vector-indexed codebase answering the question 'does this diff break assumptions made elsewhere in the repo?' That's a genuinely hard problem that grep and semgrep don't solve. The DX bet is right too — it hooks into your existing PR workflow, no new dashboard to visit, comments land where developers already are. My only real concern is the moment of truth: the first few comments it posts will either build trust or destroy it permanently, and I've seen enough false positives from CodeClimate and friends to know that noisy reviewers get silenced fast. If the signal-to-noise ratio holds, this earns a permanent place in the CI stack.

88/100 · ship

The primitive is clean: promptable segmentation over images, video frames, and sparse 3D point clouds via a unified inference interface — no fine-tuning required. The DX bet Meta made is that developers want a composable foundation model they can drop into a pipeline, not a SaaS endpoint they have to negotiate with, and that bet is exactly right. Where SAM 1 required post-processing hacks to propagate masks across frames, SAM 3 handles temporal consistency natively, which eliminates a whole category of brittle glue code I've personally written. The specific technical decision that earns the ship: open weights with a documented Python API that doesn't require you to memorize a config file before you can run inference on a single image.

Skeptic
72/100 · ship

Direct competitors are CodeRabbit and Sourcery — both already do codebase-aware PR review with GitHub integration, and CodeRabbit has a generous free tier that's eaten a lot of mindshare. Greptile's actual differentiator is their codebase indexing layer, which they've been building as a standalone product, not a bolt-on. The scenario where this breaks is a large monorepo with 10+ years of legacy context — the model will hallucinate architectural 'rules' that don't actually exist and start blocking valid changes. What kills this in 12 months is GitHub shipping their own Copilot-native PR review natively into the platform, which they've already previewed. If I'm wrong, it's because Greptile's indexing quality turns out to be meaningfully better than what GitHub can build in-house.

82/100 · ship

Direct competitors are SAM 2 (which this replaces), Grounded-SAM pipelines, and the growing cluster of closed segmentation APIs from Roboflow and Scale AI — SAM 3 beats all of them on cost (free) and beats most on video consistency without needing a separate tracker bolted on. The scenario where this breaks is 3D: 'preliminary point-cloud support' is doing a lot of work in that sentence, and anyone who tries to run this on dense LiDAR scans for autonomous driving will hit accuracy floors fast. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Meta's own next release; the model will be superseded, but the open-weights distribution model means SAM 3 stays useful in frozen production pipelines long after SAM 4 drops, which is the real moat here.

Founder
52/100 · skip

The buyer is an engineering manager or DevOps lead pulling from a tooling budget, which is real money — but the moat question is brutal here. Greptile's defensibility lives entirely in their codebase indexing quality, and GitHub can ship 80% of this natively through Copilot Enterprise the moment they prioritize it, which their roadmap already suggests. The expand story is plausible — you land on code review and expand to codebase Q&A, onboarding, impact analysis — but none of that is priced or packaged clearly enough to see the expansion motion. I'd want to see proprietary model fine-tuning on review outcomes or workflow lock-in beyond PR comments before I called this defensible.

No panel take
PM
75/100 · ship

The job-to-be-done is clean and singular: catch issues in PRs that require understanding the broader codebase, not just the diff. No 'and/or' required. Onboarding likely follows the standard GitHub App install flow — authorize, select repos, done — which means a developer can realistically get their first automated review comment within 10 minutes of landing on the page, and that's the right bar. The product has a real opinion: it decides what to comment on rather than dumping everything it finds, and that restraint is what separates useful review tools from noisy ones. The gap I'd flag is refinement controls — can a team tune what kinds of issues get surfaced without writing custom rules? If that's missing, senior engineers will override the tool rather than configure it.

78/100 · ship

The job-to-be-done is singular and clear: give me accurate object masks from a prompt, across video frames, without training a custom model. SAM 3 nails that job for images and mostly nails it for video; the 3D support is more 'tech preview' than 'shipped feature' and shouldn't factor into adoption decisions today. Onboarding is as fast as cloning a repo and running the example notebook — value in under 5 minutes if you have a GPU, which is the right bar for a developer-facing research artifact. The product opinion is strong: Meta has decided that promptable segmentation (clicks, boxes, text) is the right interaction model rather than category-specific fine-tuned heads, and every design decision flows from that commitment — which is exactly the kind of opinionated stance that makes a tool actually useful rather than infinitely configurable and practically useless.

Futurist
No panel take
85/100 · ship

The thesis SAM 3 bets on: by 2028, visual understanding is a commodity layer, and the developers who own application logic on top of open segmentation primitives will capture more value than those who depend on closed vision APIs. That's a plausible and falsifiable claim — it fails if frontier closed models (GPT-5V, Gemini Ultra vision) get cheap enough that the total cost of ownership for open weights (infra, latency tuning, versioning) exceeds the API bill. The second-order effect nobody is talking about: real-time video segmentation at this quality level unlocks sports analytics, retail foot-traffic analysis, and AR object persistence for teams that previously couldn't afford the compute or the licensing. SAM 3 is on-time to the open computer vision trend — not early, not late — and it's well-positioned because Meta's institutional commitment to open weights is a credible signal that this won't be quietly deprecated behind a paywall.

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