AI tool comparison
Onform vs SkyPilot Research Agents
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Onform
Build and manage forms from Claude using plain language
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Onform is an MCP-native form builder — the first form tool designed around MCP as its primary interface rather than a visual drag-and-drop UI. You describe the form you want to Claude or Cursor, and Onform's MCP server creates it, adds fields, sets validation rules, configures submissions, and returns a live URL. No dashboard, no templates, no GUI required. The platform handles all the backend infrastructure: submission storage, email notifications, spam filtering, and export to CSV or webhook. Each form has a public URL and an admin API. Updating a form is as simple as telling your agent what to change. Onform is built for developers who create forms as part of larger agent workflows — onboarding flows, data collection pipelines, feedback loops — where manually clicking through a SaaS dashboard breaks the automation chain. It supports multi-step forms, conditional logic, file uploads, and custom branding via MCP tool parameters.
Developer Tools
SkyPilot Research Agents
Add a literature review phase to agent loops — +15% gains on $29 cloud spend
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
SkyPilot Research-Driven Agents is a new open-source technique and accompanying framework that dramatically improves autonomous coding agent performance by adding a literature-review phase before the coding loop begins. Instead of diving straight into code, agents first read relevant papers and competing open-source implementations, then develop a research-grounded plan before writing a single line. In a published benchmark, the research-driven loop produced a 15% speed improvement on llama.cpp inference with only $29 in total cloud compute spend — using SkyPilot to spin up and tear down cloud VMs for parallel agent tasks. The framework is open-sourced in the SkyPilot repository and works with any coding agent runtime including Claude Code and Codex. The insight is straightforward: coding agents fail less when they have domain context. A literature review phase that reads the top 3 papers and top 2 competing GitHub repos before touching the codebase gives agents the same contextual grounding a senior engineer gets from months on a project. The SkyPilot cloud orchestration layer makes the compute cost of running these longer-horizon agents tractable.
Reviewer scorecard
“MCP-first is the right design philosophy for developer tools in 2026. Being able to spin up a form with submission handling and webhook delivery through a Claude conversation — without touching a UI — removes a surprisingly annoying friction point in agent-built workflows.”
“+15% on llama.cpp for $29 is a remarkable return. The research-first pattern is something every senior engineer already does intuitively — formalizing it into the agent loop is obvious in retrospect. Add this to any performance-optimization agent workflow now.”
“Typeform, Tally, and even Google Forms are hard to beat on price and ecosystem. The MCP angle is clever but the addressable market is narrow — most teams who need forms don't have an agent workflow they need to fit it into. The moat depends entirely on MCP adoption velocity.”
“The llama.cpp benchmark is a well-studied domain with abundant public literature — ideal conditions for a research-first approach. Try this on an obscure internal codebase with no papers to read and see what happens. The gains likely don't generalize as cleanly.”
“Every data collection touchpoint that can be managed by an agent will be. Onform is a small example of how MCP will quietly restructure the SaaS tool category — tools that can't be controlled programmatically via agents will lose to tools that can.”
“This is how agents get to expert-level performance in specialized domains — not just bigger models, but better information-gathering architectures. The research-first pattern will become standard for any agent doing non-trivial technical work. SkyPilot is just the first to publish the recipe.”
“For most creative use cases — reader surveys, client intake, waitlist signups — the visual feedback of building a form matters. Describing a form in text and trusting the agent to get the layout right sounds good but loses something in translation for design-sensitive contexts.”
“Not directly relevant to creative workflows, but the underlying principle — give agents context before asking them to create — absolutely is. Interesting to watch how this pattern evolves outside pure coding tasks.”
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