Where the matrix lives
Open data, open PRs:
github.com/CloudAxisAi/ai-agent-comparison-table
The README holds the human-readable table; comparison.csv is the same rows for spreadsheets and BI tools.
What we compare (and what we skip)
We score productized workflow features, not "which model writes prettier prose." Columns include whether the product ships a cloud browser, whether cron-style scheduling is first-class, whether there is a hard spending cap (vs default metered overage), and whether the core is open source and self-hostable.
Cells are only Yes, No, or Partial — Partial means "exists on some plans," "beta," "enterprise-only API," or "you self-host one half and pay for the other." That is intentional: binary cheerleading would lie by omission.
We do not try to rank "best agent" — your stack depends on compliance, budget, and whether you need a browser, IDE, or pure workflow automation.
How this relates to our other comparison content
CloudyBot also publishes a pillar comparison page focused on buyer positioning (scheduling, mobile, caps). The GitHub matrix is wider and more mechanical — more products, more columns, meant for operators and builders who want raw attributes. For pricing mechanics (hard cap vs metered vs credits), pair this with AI pricing comparison (2026) and the pricing repo.
For a future deep-dive only on browser automation products, the README links to browser-automation-comparison (coming soon).
CloudyBot in the table (accurate rows)
We include CloudyBot in the matrix next to other vendors. A quick honest read of the row:
- Cloud browser: Yes — included on the free tier with a small monthly minute allowance; paid plans add more.
- Scheduled tasks: Partial — cron / Specialists are a paid-plan capability; the free tier does not include cron jobs.
- WhatsApp: Partial — WhatsApp delivery is on Base and above, not on free.
- Hard spending cap: Yes — usage stops at plan limits rather than silent overages.
- API: No — the product is primarily workspace-first rather than a public HTTP automation API for third-party orchestration.
Numbers and plan names stay in sync with Pricing and plans.js in our codebase; if we ship a feature, the table should get a PR.
Conceptual background
If the columns feel abstract, read What is an AI agent? for the agent loop, tools, and memory — then Cloud browser automation for why hosted browsers matter for real web work. The broader landscape list is Awesome AI agents (2026).
Further reading
- AI agent comparison table — GitHub repo + CSV
- What is an AI agent? A technical explainer
- Cloud browser automation: how AI agents browse the web
- Awesome AI agents list (2026)
Related reading
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