AI tool comparison
OpenAI o3 Pro API vs RisingWave Agent Skills
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
OpenAI o3 Pro API
OpenAI's most capable reasoning model now open for API access
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
OpenAI has opened general API access to o3 Pro, its highest-capability reasoning model, designed for complex multi-step problem-solving tasks. The release includes function-calling and structured output support, making it integration-ready for production workflows. Pricing is $20 per million input tokens and $80 per million output tokens, positioning it as a premium tier above o3.
Developer Tools
RisingWave Agent Skills
Teach 18 AI coding agents to write correct streaming SQL — no hallucinated syntax
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
RisingWave's agent-skills package injects streaming SQL expertise into 18 AI coding assistants (Claude Code, GitHub Copilot, Cursor, Windsurf, and more) via the agentskills.io open spec. It ships two skill modules: core RisingWave connectivity and 14 best-practice rules covering CDC ingestion, materialized view patterns, time-windowed aggregations, and common pitfalls. Install via npm CLI which auto-detects which agents you have installed. Apache 2.0 licensed.
Reviewer scorecard
“The primitive is clean: a reasoning-optimized inference endpoint with function-calling and structured output baked in, not bolted on. The DX bet here is that you pay for latency and cost in exchange for dramatically fewer hallucinations and more reliable chain-of-thought on hard problems — and that's the right tradeoff for the specific class of tasks this targets. The moment of truth is sending it a gnarly multi-constraint problem that trips up o3 or GPT-4o, and it actually handles it. The weekend alternative is not a thing here — you're not replicating this with a prompt wrapper and retries.”
“AI coding assistants hallucinate streaming SQL constantly — CDC ingestion patterns, windowed aggregations, and materialized view semantics are all places where generic training data fails hard. An installable skill package that auto-detects your agents and patches in correct context is exactly the right fix. Worth adding if you're building on RisingWave.”
“Direct competitor is Gemini 2.5 Pro, which is faster and cheaper on most reasoning benchmarks, and Anthropic's Claude 3.7 Sonnet which undercuts the price significantly. The specific scenario where o3 Pro breaks is latency-sensitive applications — this model is slow, and at $80 per million output tokens, a single agentic loop can cost real money before you notice. What kills this in 12 months is not a competitor but OpenAI itself shipping a faster, cheaper o4 that makes this look like a transitional SKU. That said, for tasks where correctness is worth paying for — legal reasoning, scientific analysis, complex code generation — the ship is earned.”
“This only matters if you're already using RisingWave, which is a niche streaming SQL database with a much smaller user base than Postgres or Kafka. Four stars on GitHub suggests the audience is narrow. The agentskills.io spec is interesting as a standard but it's vapor if no one else adopts it.”
“The buyer is a developer at a company with a use case where wrong answers are expensive — legal, medical, financial, or scientific. The pricing architecture is the problem: $80 per million output tokens sounds reasonable until you're running agentic loops with multi-turn reasoning chains and your invoice is four figures for a feature still in beta. The moat is genuinely real — OpenAI's training data and RLHF investment is hard to replicate — but the pricing doesn't survive contact with cost-conscious enterprise buyers when Gemini and Anthropic are both cheaper and credible. The specific thing that would flip this to a ship: usage-based pricing with a ceiling or committed-spend discounts that actually appear on the pricing page instead of hiding behind an enterprise sales motion.”
“The thesis is that reasoning-as-a-service becomes the primitive layer of software the way databases and message queues did — you don't roll your own, you call an endpoint. For o3 Pro to win, two things have to stay true: reasoning capability must remain differentiated from general-purpose models for long enough to build switching costs, and the cost curve must drop fast enough to open new application categories before competitors close the gap. The second-order effect that nobody is writing about is that structured output plus reliable function-calling in a frontier reasoning model means the bottleneck in agentic systems shifts from model capability to workflow design — that's a power transfer from ML teams to product teams. This is riding the inference cost deflation trend and is slightly early on the pricing, but the infrastructure position is real.”
“Every database, framework, and specialized API is going to need its own skill package for AI coding agents. RisingWave is just the first mover on an inevitable pattern. The open spec is the actually important thing here — it could become how the entire ecosystem teaches agents about domain-specific tools.”
“Not really in my wheelhouse — streaming SQL and data pipelines are developer infrastructure. But the 'teach your AI assistant the local dialect' concept is one I'd love to see applied to design systems, component libraries, and brand guidelines. Someone should build this for Figma.”
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