AI tool comparison
Sup AI vs Superhuman
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
AI Productivity
Sup AI
Runs 339 LLMs in parallel and downweights the hallucinating ones.
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Sup AI is an ensemble AI assistant that runs your query through 339 language models simultaneously, measures per-segment confidence across all responses, and synthesizes a final answer that amplifies agreement and suppresses likely hallucinations. The team claims a 52.15% score on Humanity's Last Exam (HLE) — 7.41 percentage points above the single best model — which, if verified, would make it the highest-scoring system on the benchmark to date. The underlying mechanism works like an LLM panel: each model votes on sub-claims within the response, confidence is estimated by agreement density, and the final output surfaces high-confidence segments while flagging uncertain ones. It's designed to reduce hallucination rate on factual tasks, not improve reasoning per se — the models in the ensemble aren't doing collaborative chain-of-thought, they're voting on outputs. Sup AI was built by Ken Mueller (Stanford, CEO) and Scott Mueller (AI Research Scientist) and launched on Product Hunt today. Pricing starts with $10 in free credits, no auto-charge, with a credit card required to start. The HLE benchmark claim is the headline and will face scrutiny — if verified, this is a meaningful research result. If it's cherry-picked, it's still a usable product with a differentiated architecture.
Productivity
Superhuman
The fastest email experience with AI triage and drafting
33%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Superhuman is a premium email client built for speed. AI features include instant replies, email triage, follow-up reminders, and tone adjustment. Known for its keyboard-first design and split-second load times.
Reviewer scorecard
“The HLE claim needs independent verification, but the underlying ensemble approach is architecturally sound for factual Q&A tasks. Running 339 models is expensive — pricing will be the gating factor for production use. The $10 free credit is a fair trial.”
“Great product but the closed ecosystem is a problem. No Linux support, limited API, no plugins. If you're in the Apple ecosystem it's fine. Otherwise, look elsewhere.”
“Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. A 7.41 point jump on HLE via ensembling — without publishing methodology — smells like benchmark gaming. The latency of running 339 models in parallel is also a real concern for anything other than async research tasks.”
“$30/mo for an email client is hard to justify when Gmail is free and has AI features too. The speed is nice but not $360/year nice. A productivity tax for the sake of aesthetics.”
“Model ensembling is an underexplored direction in the race to reduce hallucination. If Sup AI's approach scales, it could be more durable than fine-tuning individual models — you get the wisdom of the crowd across model families, training data, and architectures simultaneously.”
“For creative work, ensemble outputs tend to regress toward the mean — you get the most-agreed-upon version of something, which is usually the least interesting version. This is a tool for factual accuracy, not creativity. I'd stick with a single strong model for writing.”
“At $30/mo it's a luxury, but email is where I spend 2+ hours daily. Superhuman cuts that to 45 minutes. The AI triage alone — auto-sorting important vs noise — is worth it.”
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