AI tool comparison
TUI-use vs Vercel 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
TUI-use
Let AI agents take control of interactive terminal programs
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
TUI-use is an open-source library that gives AI agents the ability to interact with traditional interactive terminal (TUI) applications — think vim, htop, ssh sessions, database CLIs, and legacy text-based UIs that were never designed for programmatic control. Instead of requiring a GUI or a REST API, TUI-use interprets terminal output as structured state and sends synthetic keystrokes back, enabling agents to "see" and "drive" any TUI application as if they were a human at a keyboard. The project was born from a real pain point: AI coding agents can call bash commands and write files, but they fail badly the moment a tool opens an interactive prompt waiting for user input. TUI-use solves this by building a state machine layer over PTY (pseudo-terminal) interfaces, letting agents read the current screen buffer, detect interactive prompts, and respond intelligently. It ships with adapters for common TUI patterns and a clean API that works with any LLM tool-use framework. The Show HN post attracted genuine interest from the ops and DevOps community — many existing workflows depend on tools that expose only an interactive terminal interface. TUI-use fills a real gap in the "AI agents that control computers" space by handling the long tail of CLI programs that have no API, no GUI, and no intention of ever getting one.
Developer Tools
Vercel Skills
Install reusable agent skills across Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, and 40+ more
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Vercel Labs Skills is a CLI tool (`npx skills`) that introduces a standardized, portable format for AI agent capabilities. Instead of crafting system prompts project by project, developers install SKILL.md files — YAML-frontmatter instruction sets — globally or per-project, and they work across 40+ coding agents: Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, Continue, and more. The skills ecosystem solves a genuine portability problem: every team that switches tools loses carefully crafted agent instructions. A skill installed once — say, "write tests in Vitest with coverage" or "generate accessible React components" — persists across projects and survives tool migrations. Skills are composable, version-controlled, and shareable via npm or git. Community uptake has been rapid since launch, with a growing registry of skills covering testing, documentation, code review, accessibility, and API design patterns. At 317 GitHub stars on day one, it's the most promising attempt yet at building a cross-agent skill ecosystem — and Vercel's distribution muscle means it's likely to become the de facto standard.
Reviewer scorecard
“This is the missing piece for automating legacy ops workflows. Half my toolchain is interactive TUI apps that choke every agent pipeline — TUI-use just quietly solves that. The PTY state machine approach is clever and the API is clean.”
“This is exactly the missing layer in the agent toolchain. I've rebuilt the same 'write integration tests' prompt four times across different tools — Skills ends that. The SKILL.md format is clean and the cross-agent portability is real, not theoretical.”
“Screen-scraping terminal output to infer state is fragile — any change in terminal colors, locale, or version will break your parser. This works fine for demos but I'd want to see battle-hardened error recovery before running it against anything production-critical.”
“Every agent interprets instructions differently, so a skill that works perfectly in Claude Code may produce mediocre results in Cursor. The 'write once, run everywhere' promise needs a lot more testing across the 40 claimed agents before I'd rely on it for production workflows.”
“The real unlock here is making 40 years of terminal software suddenly agentic without a single line change from the original developers. TUI-use could quietly become the bridge that lets AI agents inherit the entire unix toolchain ecosystem.”
“Skills are the app store moment for agent capabilities. When the community settles on a shared format for agent instructions, you get network effects — a skill written by a Next.js expert gets used by thousands of devs who never had to learn the underlying prompt engineering. This is how agent capabilities commoditize.”
“Not my usual domain but I can see this saving hours for anyone managing servers — having an agent that can actually ssh in and navigate interactive prompts without getting stuck is genuinely useful. The demo videos make it look surprisingly smooth.”
“Finally I can install a 'write accessible UI components' skill and know it'll work whether I'm in Cursor or Claude Code. The composability is the killer feature — stack a testing skill with a documentation skill and your agent just... does both, consistently.”
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