AI tool comparison
Kelet vs Code Llama 4 (70B & 400B)
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Kelet
Reads your LLM traces, finds failure patterns, and hands you the prompt fix
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Kelet is a root-cause analysis agent for LLM applications that goes beyond trace visualization. Where most observability tools stop at showing you what happened, Kelet automatically reads your traces, cross-references failure patterns across thousands of sessions — thumbs-down ratings, abandoned conversations, LLM-judge flags — generates root cause hypotheses, and produces targeted prompt patches to address them. The workflow is: connect your traces (LangSmith, Langfuse, or direct API), let Kelet ingest your failure signals, and receive a prioritized list of failure clusters with explanations and draft prompt fixes. SOC 2 Type II certified, read-only access to traces — nothing is mutated. The indie team positions it as the missing "closing of the loop" in LLM observability: most teams can detect failures but have no systematic path from detection to fix. The HN thread surfaced a real pain point: teams know their chatbot is failing somewhere, but diagnosing which prompts, tools, or routing decisions are responsible requires manual trace archaeology. Kelet automates that archaeology and produces actionable output, not just dashboards.
Developer Tools
Code Llama 4 (70B & 400B)
Meta's open-source code models: 70B and 400B, self-hostable and free
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Meta has open-sourced Code Llama 4 in 70B and 400B parameter variants under a permissive research license, targeting state-of-the-art performance on HumanEval and SWE-bench benchmarks. The models support function calling and long-context code completion, and are available for download on Hugging Face. Developers can self-host, fine-tune, or integrate the weights into their own pipelines without per-token API costs.
Reviewer scorecard
“The loop has been open for too long — collect traces, stare at them, guess at fixes, repeat. Kelet closes it. Read-only access is the right trust model for early adoption. If it actually surfaces actionable prompt patches instead of generic insights, this becomes a staple of any serious LLM app development workflow.”
“The primitive here is raw model weights you can actually run: no API wrapper, no rate limits, no vendor controlling your uptime. The DX bet Meta made is correct — drop weights on Hugging Face, let the ecosystem (vLLM, llama.cpp, Ollama) handle the serving layer. The moment of truth is spinning up a 70B quant locally or on a single A100, and that actually works without 12 env vars. The 400B is a different story — you're in multi-GPU territory fast — but the 70B is a genuine weekend-deployable primitive. The specific decision that earns the ship: function calling support baked in at the weight level means you're not duct-taping tool use on top after the fact.”
“Automated prompt patches from an LLM analyzing other LLM failures is a confidence game — how do you know the fix didn't introduce a new failure mode? Without a rigorous eval harness baked into the loop, you're swapping one unknown for another. The SOC 2 cert is good but the methodology needs more transparency.”
“Direct competitors are GPT-4.1, Claude Sonnet 3.7, and Qwen2.5-Coder — all of which have closed weights or commercial restrictions. The specific scenario where Code Llama 4 breaks is enterprise fine-tuning at 400B scale: most teams can't afford the compute to actually adapt it, so they'll run 70B quantized and wonder why it doesn't hit benchmark numbers. The HumanEval and SWE-bench claims need scrutiny — Meta authored the eval setup, and 'state-of-the-art' on benchmarks designed around pass@1 on clean problems doesn't map cleanly to real codebases with legacy debt and ambiguous specs. What saves this from a skip: the permissive license is real, the Hugging Face availability is real, and the 70B model gives teams genuine pricing leverage against OpenAI. Prediction: this wins by being the baseline every fine-tune starts from, not by being the best raw model.”
“LLM apps are entering the maintenance and reliability phase — the 'build it and see' era is over. Systematic failure analysis with auto-generated remediation is the natural next layer of the stack. Kelet is early, but the category is real and it will be important infrastructure within 18 months.”
“The thesis: by 2027, the majority of production code-generation inference runs on self-hosted open weights because closed API costs are structurally incompatible with the volume that agentic coding pipelines generate. Code Llama 4 is a direct bet on that trajectory, and the 70B/400B split is smart — it covers the 'runs on one node' use case and the 'we have a cluster' use case simultaneously. The second-order effect that matters most isn't cheaper completions — it's that fine-tuning on proprietary codebases becomes viable without shipping your IP to a third-party API. The trend line is the commoditization of inference hardware plus the normalization of multi-step coding agents; Code Llama 4 is on-time, not early. The future state where this is infrastructure: every mid-size engineering org runs a Code Llama 4 fine-tune on their own codebase as a first-class internal tool, same as they run their own CI.”
“If you've shipped a chatbot or AI writing tool and are drowning in 'the bot said something weird' support tickets, Kelet is the triage system you didn't know you needed. Finding which prompt variant is responsible for the weirdness has historically been a manual nightmare.”
“The buyer here isn't an individual — it's an engineering team with a cloud bill and a compliance department that doesn't want code leaving the perimeter. That's a real, funded budget: 'self-hosted AI' sits in infra, not experimental tooling. The moat question is where this gets complicated: Meta has no moat in the traditional sense, but the ecosystem lock-in comes from fine-tune artifacts and toolchain integrations that accumulate over time. The real business risk is that Meta releases Code Llama 5 in eight months and the 400B variant is immediately obsolete before most teams have even finished deploying it — the open-source cadence creates capability depreciation that's faster than enterprise adoption cycles. Still a ship because the pricing model — free weights, you pay for compute you'd be paying for anyway — is the only model that survives contact with a CFO asking why you're paying per-token for internal tooling.”
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