AI tool comparison
Memoket Gem vs Comet Browser by Perplexity AI
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Productivity
Memoket Gem
Domino-sized wearable captures every conversation with 20hr battery
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Memoket Gem is an AI-powered wearable recording device about the size of a domino (1.57 x 0.98 x 0.40 inches, 0.4 oz) that clips to your wrist alongside an Apple Watch or snaps into a pendant or clip. A single button press captures meetings, conversations, and spontaneous ideas, which the companion app transforms into structured summaries, action items, and searchable notes — automatically. Dual high-quality microphones pick up voices from up to 16.4 feet with built-in noise cancellation. What sets Memoket apart from competitors like Plaud and Rewind AI is its cross-conversation context linking: the app connects information across past and present meetings, helping you recall context without manual tagging. Battery life hits 20 hours of continuous recording on a single charge. Memoket is firmly privacy-first: recordings are never used to train public AI models and all data belongs to the user. The Product Hunt launch today garnered 175 upvotes, placing it at the top of today's leaderboard among a competitive field of AI productivity tools.
Productivity
Comet Browser by Perplexity AI
A desktop browser that autonomously completes web tasks for you
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Comet is a desktop browser built by Perplexity AI that deeply integrates its agentic search engine, allowing it to autonomously execute multi-step web tasks on behalf of users. Rather than just surfacing answers, Comet can navigate sites, fill forms, and complete workflows without manual intervention. Early access is gated behind Perplexity Pro with a public waitlist open.
Reviewer scorecard
“The API hooks for pulling structured meeting data programmatically make Memoket genuinely useful for developers — you can pipe summaries into Notion, Linear, or your own tools with minimal friction. The hardware form factor is also more discreet than the Plaud NotePin.”
“Another wearable promising to remember your life for you. At $99+ plus a subscription for cloud sync, you're deep into Otter.ai / Plaud territory where the value proposition gets murky fast. The bigger issue: people near you don't always consent to being recorded, which is a real ethical and legal landmine.”
“The category is agentic browser automation — direct competitors are Anthropic's Computer Use, OpenAI Operator, and Arc's now-shelved Browse for Me, all of which have demonstrated the same core loop and hit the same walls: form auth, CAPTCHAs, and any site that detects non-human behavior. Comet breaks the moment a user wants it to handle a logged-in, dynamic SPA that rate-limits bots — which is most of the web that matters. What kills this in 12 months: OpenAI ships Operator to all ChatGPT users for free and Perplexity's differentiation collapses to brand preference. To earn a ship, Comet needs to demonstrate persistent session handling and a credible story for the 60% of high-value tasks that live behind auth walls.”
“The multi-conversation context linking is where Memoket gets genuinely interesting — it's not just transcription, it's ambient memory. When this works reliably at scale, it's a meaningful step toward the total-recall personal intelligence layer that used to require a supercomputer.”
“The thesis here is specific and falsifiable: by 2027, the browser tab is no longer a viewport you stare at — it's a task queue you delegate to. Comet is betting that the interface layer between humans and the web collapses from 'navigate and click' to 'state intent and verify result.' That's a real trajectory, and Perplexity is one of the few players with a live search index plus the intent-capture surface to make the delegation model feel natural rather than scripted. The second-order effect that matters: if Comet works, SEO as a discipline dies faster than anyone is modeling — the bot reads the page so the human doesn't, and click-through becomes irrelevant. The dependency that has to hold: users must be willing to hand over ambient browsing context to Perplexity's servers, which is a trust bet that sits on regulatory quicksand. Still, as a positioned bet on the trend of intent-first computing, this is early and credible rather than late and derivative.”
“Workshops, client calls, brainstorm sessions — I would wear this constantly. Auto-structured summaries with action items save at least an hour of post-meeting note cleanup, and the cross-session memory linking is exactly what creative project management needs.”
“The buyer is a Perplexity Pro subscriber who already pays $20/month — Comet is a retention and upgrade mechanism dressed as a product launch, which is actually smart distribution. The moat question is harder: browser distribution is a graveyard (ask Opera, Brave, Arc) and the switching cost of a browser is enormous for consumers but thin for Perplexity because users won't abandon Chrome for search features alone. The business survives model cost compression because Perplexity's value isn't the underlying LLM — it's the index and the task orchestration layer sitting on top of it. What worries me is the expand story: once you've automated the tasks a Pro user cares about, what's the upsell? There's no obvious enterprise tier with audit logs and admin controls mentioned at launch, which means the revenue ceiling is whatever the Pro subscriber count is. Viable, but not yet a standalone business thesis.”
“The job-to-be-done as stated is 'complete multi-step web tasks autonomously' — that sentence contains an 'and' hiding inside 'multi-step,' which means this product is trying to solve task delegation, context retention, and web navigation simultaneously before nailing any one of them. The onboarding reality: users join a waitlist, get access inside a Pro subscription, and then face the blank-slate problem of not knowing which tasks are reliably automatable versus which will silently fail halfway through. That's not a 2-minute path to value — that's a discovery tax. The product isn't complete enough to replace any existing workflow today because there's no task library, no failure transparency, and no way to audit what the agent actually did. Until Comet ships a defined set of tasks it handles end-to-end with high reliability and surfaces that clearly at onboarding, it's a demo with a waitlist, not a product.”
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