Compare/Manus Skills vs Task Bert

AI tool comparison

Manus Skills vs Task Bert

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

M

Productivity

Manus Skills

Package your best Manus workflows into reusable, shareable skills

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Manus Skills is a new layer on top of the Manus autonomous agent platform that lets users capture multi-step workflows as reusable, parameterized 'Skills.' Once saved, a Skill can be re-run with different inputs, shared with teammates, or published to a community library. Think of it as turning an ad-hoc agent session into a repeatable automation — like a macro, but with LLM intelligence at each step. The feature addresses one of the core frustrations with current agent platforms: every task starts from scratch. Manus Skills lets power users encode their best prompting patterns and workflow sequences into durable primitives. A research Skill might chain web search, source validation, and structured output; a content Skill might handle drafting, image sourcing, and formatting in sequence — all re-runnable with a single input parameter. Launching today as a Product Hunt pick, Manus Skills signals the platform's evolution from a chat-based agent into a workflow automation tool with a community knowledge layer. If the Skills marketplace takes off, Manus could become the Zapier of LLM-native automation — with the added power of reasoning at each step.

T

Productivity

Task Bert

Fully local iMessage AI agent that turns your conversations into tasks

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Task Bert is a privacy-first Mac app that acts as a local AI assistant for your iMessage conversations. It runs entirely on-device using local vector embeddings and your own API key (OpenAI or Anthropic), so your messages never touch a third-party server. The assistant can search across your message history, convert casual plans buried in conversations into calendar events and reminders, and surface follow-up nudges for conversations that fell through the cracks. The technical implementation is clean: it uses Hugging Face's nomic-embed-text model for on-device vector embeddings, meaning semantic search across your iMessage history doesn't require cloud calls. When it detects a plan or commitment in a conversation ("let's grab coffee Thursday"), it can write it directly to Apple Calendar and Reminders. The BYOK model puts the user in control — the app acts as orchestration layer, not a data holder. Task Bert targets a real pain point for heavy iMessage users: important follow-ups and plans routinely get buried in high-volume group chats or forgotten in long one-on-one threads. By running locally and integrating natively with Apple's ecosystem, it sidesteps the privacy concerns that have plagued cloud-based messaging assistants.

Decision
Manus Skills
Task Bert
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Included with Manus subscription
Free / Open Source (BYOK)
Best for
Package your best Manus workflows into reusable, shareable skills
Fully local iMessage AI agent that turns your conversations into tasks
Category
Productivity
Productivity

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

Parameterized agent workflows that actually persist and share — this is the missing piece in nearly every agent platform. The ability to encode prompting expertise into a Skill and share it with a team removes the 'prompt whisperer' bottleneck entirely.

80/100 · ship

BYOK + on-device embeddings is the right architecture for a messaging assistant. No cold storage of conversations, no vendor lock-in, no trust required. Using nomic-embed-text locally for semantic search is a smart call — it's fast and accurate enough for this use case without GPU hardware.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

Manus still has reliability and hallucination issues in complex multi-step tasks. Wrapping unreliable agent runs into 'Skills' and calling them reusable just scales the failure modes. The community library angle will also inevitably fill with low-quality Skills that break as models update.

45/100 · skip

Apple's iMessage privacy model creates real friction here — accessing message history requires specific macOS permissions that users are increasingly reluctant to grant after recent privacy scandals. Also, iMessage-only limits this to Apple devices, cutting out anyone running a mixed iOS/Android household. The addressable market is narrower than it looks.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Composable agent skills are an early step toward a true agent app store. The long-term vision — where the best human knowledge workers encode their expertise into Skills that anyone can run — is genuinely transformative. Manus may not be the final form, but this is the right direction.

80/100 · ship

The local-first AI assistant is the next major product category. Task Bert is an early proof-of-concept for what happens when you give an AI agent read access to your communication history with proper privacy guarantees. As local inference gets faster, every major messaging platform will have something like this — but the indie versions will always be more trustworthy.

Creator
80/100 · ship

As a creator who runs the same research-to-draft workflow daily, having a Skill I can launch in one click versus rebuilding it from chat each time is a real productivity unlock. The sharing aspect means I can finally pass my best workflows to collaborators.

80/100 · ship

The follow-up nudge feature alone would pay for this tool. I can't count how many creative collabs have died because someone (usually me) forgot to follow up on a message thread. Having an on-device assistant surface those forgotten conversations without sending them to a cloud server feels like a genuinely ethical approach to AI assistance.

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