AI tool comparison
Safari MCP vs Windmill
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Browser Automation
Safari MCP
80 native tools to automate Safari from your AI agent on macOS
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Safari MCP is an open-source Model Context Protocol server that exposes 80 native macOS tools for automating Safari — covering everything from tab management and form filling to JavaScript execution, screenshot capture, and network request interception. Unlike Playwright or Puppeteer which spin up a Chromium subprocess, Safari MCP connects directly to a running Safari instance through AppleScript and the macOS Accessibility APIs, making it the only browser automation option that works with your actual logged-in Safari session, cookies, and extensions intact. The 80-tool scope is notable: most browser MCP implementations ship 10–20 tools focused on basic navigation. Safari MCP covers the full browser lifecycle — bookmark management, reading list, private browsing, download tracking, and even Safari's built-in translation feature. For macOS-heavy teams where Safari is the default browser (and where Chrome-based automation feels like bringing in a chainsaw to peel an apple), this fills a practical gap. It appeared on Hacker News with a small but enthusiastic audience — primarily macOS devs who've been watching the Chrome-centric browser automation ecosystem with mild frustration. The zero-dependency installation (no browser binary downloads, no npm build step) and the fact that it leverages Apple's own accessibility stack rather than reverse-engineering the browser protocol makes it an unusually clean approach.
Automation
Windmill
Open-source developer platform for scripts and workflows
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Windmill turns scripts into workflows, UIs, and scheduled jobs. Write in TypeScript, Python, Go, or SQL and get auto-generated UIs with approval flows.
Reviewer scorecard
“Finally — a browser MCP that works with my actual session rather than a fresh sandboxed Chrome instance. For macOS workflows where I need the agent to interact with sites I'm already logged into, this is immediately useful.”
“Scripts become workflows with auto-generated UIs. The approval flows and scheduling turn scripts into proper automation.”
“AppleScript and Accessibility API automation is notoriously brittle across macOS updates — Apple has a habit of quietly breaking third-party accessibility automation without notice. I'd want to see macOS version compatibility guarantees before building any serious pipeline on this.”
“Open-source Retool + n8n hybrid. The auto-generated UI from script parameters is surprisingly useful.”
“The pattern of 'connect to the user's real browser rather than a disposable sandbox' is the right direction for personal AI agents. As agents become more integrated with our daily digital lives, using our actual identity and context beats spinning up a clean slate every time.”
“Internal tooling from scripts with auto-generated UIs is the right abstraction for developer-built automation.”
“Being able to point Claude at my actual Safari with my actual logins to help me research and interact with sites I use daily is a real quality-of-life win. This is the kind of 'just works with my setup' tool I actually reach for.”
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