Comparison — 2026
Dune vs ASI:One
How does the Ship or Skip panel rate each tool? Here's the side-by-side breakdown.
Productivity
A 3-key Mac keypad that changes what it does based on your active app
Productivity
A personal AI that remembers you, plans, and acts across agents
Reviewer-by-Reviewer
I lose an embarrassing amount of time hunting for the right shortcut in the right app. Having a physical device that reconfigures itself automatically is exactly the kind of ambient tooling I want on my desk. The AI agent trigger support is the killer feature.
The primitive here is a stateful conversation router with a pluggable agent registry — and the @agent syntax is actually the right DX bet. Instead of building yet another monolithic assistant, they've exposed the seams so you can compose domain-specific capabilities inline, which is exactly what I want from a platform that's honest about what it is. The moment of truth is whether the Agentverse marketplace has enough real, working agents to justify the architecture — and that's the honest unknown I can't answer without shipping it for a month.
Three keys is a very limited surface area for the price, and context detection reliability in niche dev tools is going to be hit-or-miss. A well-configured Stream Deck with a few profiles does 90% of this for less money.
The direct competitor is ChatGPT Memory plus GPT Store, which already does persistent memory plus specialized plugins with a vastly larger distribution channel and model quality ceiling — and OpenAI hasn't stopped shipping. The specific scenario where ASI:One breaks is any power user who needs agents to reliably chain real-world actions, because the Agentverse marketplace quality is community-driven and unverified, meaning you're one bad agent away from a corrupted workflow. What kills this in 12 months: OpenAI or Google ships native persistent memory that's actually good, and the blockchain-coalition branding becomes an anchor rather than a differentiator.
Physical buttons for AI agents are the beginning of a real ambient computing shift. As agentic workflows mature, having dedicated hardware triggers rather than keyboard shortcuts buried in menus is going to feel necessary, not optional.
The thesis is falsifiable: in 2-3 years, personal AI value will live in the memory layer and the agent network, not the base model — and whoever owns the open, composable agent marketplace wins the same way the App Store won mobile. The dependency that has to hold is that no single closed-platform player (OpenAI, Google, Anthropic) locks down the agent ecosystem before open alternatives reach critical mass; if that window closes, ASI:One is stranded. The second-order effect nobody's talking about: if Agentverse scales, it shifts economic power toward individual agent developers operating outside Big Tech's revenue-share structures, which is a genuinely new distribution of AI-era value.
When to Pick Which
Pick Duneif…
- + The panel shipped it with a 3–1 verdict
- + You need a tool in the Productivity space
- + Pricing works for you: Hardware device — pricing TBD
Pick ASI:Oneif…
- - The panel skipped it (2–2) but you disagree
- - Your use case is niche and the panel didn't test for it
- - You want to try it anyway: Free tier available / Pro plans