AI tool comparison
Marmot vs TimesFM 2.5
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Data & Analytics
Marmot
Open-source data catalog that ships as a single binary — with MCP built in.
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Marmot is an open-source data catalog built for teams that want powerful data discovery and lineage without the weight of enterprise tools like Atlan, Alation, or DataHub. It ships as a single Go binary — no Kubernetes, no Spark cluster, no multi-service deployment. Boot it up, connect your data sources, and start searching in minutes. The core feature set covers full-text and structured metadata search, interactive data lineage graphs, schema versioning, and ownership tracking. The standout differentiator is native MCP integration: Marmot exposes an MCP server so AI coding tools like Claude, Cursor, and Windsurf can query your data catalog directly — asking questions like "what tables contain PII?" or "show me the lineage for this dbt model" without leaving your IDE. Built with Go on the backend and Svelte on the frontend, Marmot is at v0.8.3 with 531 GitHub stars and an active Discord community. It launched on Product Hunt today. For data teams at startups and mid-sized companies that are currently using a spreadsheet or Notion doc as their "data catalog," Marmot is a no-brainer migration target.
Data & Analytics
TimesFM 2.5
Google's zero-shot time series forecasting model, now with 16k context
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
TimesFM 2.5 is the latest update to Google Research's pretrained time-series foundation model — a 200M parameter decoder-only model that does zero-shot forecasting across virtually any time-series domain without needing to retrain or fine-tune. Released March 31, 2026, it expands context length to 16,000 time steps (up from earlier versions) and adds an optional 30M continuous quantile head for probabilistic forecasting up to 1,000 steps ahead. Unlike traditional forecasting approaches that require training a new model per dataset, TimesFM was pre-trained on 100 billion real-world time points across diverse domains. You point it at new data — retail sales, server metrics, energy demand, financial prices — and it forecasts without any additional training. The March 31 update also restores covariate (XReg) support and updates inference APIs for better integration. With 14,000 GitHub stars and trending today, TimesFM is becoming the default baseline for time-series work in the same way BERT became the baseline for NLP tasks. Google Cloud users get it directly via BigQuery ML's AI.FORECAST function. For everyone else, it's available on HuggingFace and installable as a Python package.
Reviewer scorecard
“Single binary, MIT license, MCP server built in — this is how OSS infrastructure tools should ship. I had it running against our Postgres and dbt setup in 20 minutes. The lineage graph actually works, which is more than I can say for most 'enterprise' catalogs I've paid for.”
“Zero-shot forecasting that competes with supervised models trained specifically on your dataset is remarkable. The BigQuery ML integration makes this accessible to data teams without ML infrastructure. 16k context is enough for 13+ years of daily data.”
“v0.8.3 suggests this is still pre-production for anything serious. Data catalog adoption historically requires political buy-in across data, engineering, and analytics teams — a single binary doesn't solve the human problem. Also, connectors for enterprise sources (Snowflake, Databricks, Redshift) aren't all there yet.”
“Zero-shot is impressive in benchmarks but enterprise forecasting often has domain-specific seasonality and causal structure that a foundation model can't infer without fine-tuning. The 200M parameter model still requires non-trivial GPU resources for self-hosting.”
“MCP-native data catalogs are the beginning of AI agents being able to reason about your entire data estate. Marmot's architecture — lightweight, single binary, open protocol — is the right foundation for the next wave of agentic data tools. This could become the Prometheus of data catalogs.”
“Time-series is the dark matter of AI applications — it's everywhere (supply chains, energy grids, healthcare) but historically required expensive specialist models. Foundation models democratizing this could unlock huge productivity in industries that have been stuck with Excel.”
“For smaller data teams drowning in undocumented tables and mystery pipelines, Marmot is a genuine quality-of-life upgrade. The UI is clean and modern — rare for OSS data tools — and the search actually surfaces context you'd otherwise need to Slack a senior engineer for.”
“For content creators tracking engagement trends, ad performance, or audience growth, having a zero-shot model that can forecast without a data science team is genuinely empowering. Hook it up to your analytics data and stop guessing.”
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