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ChatGPT Operator
B
DeepSeek
S
FlashQLA
A
Rows
A
TaglineOpenAI's browser agent. Clicks and types on websites for you.Chinese open-weight powerhouse. Crazy cheap, genuinely smart.Qwen's open-source GPU kernel library that squeezes 2–3× more speed out of linear attention on NVIDIA Hopper hardware — if you're lucky enough to own one.Spreadsheets with AI + live integrations baked in.
CategoryAgentsChatbotsDev PlatformData
PricingIncluded with ChatGPT Pro $200/moFree web + ultra-cheap API (~$0.14/M input tokens)Free (MIT License, open-source)Free + $19-$89/user/mo
Best forPower users willing to pay $200/mo for a browser bot.Developers + cost-conscious builders. Anyone fine with self-hosting.ML engineers and researchers running Qwen3.x linear-attention models on H100/H200 clusters who need to close the gap between theoretical GDN efficiency and actual hardware throughput.Ops teams, marketers, anyone building dashboards from multiple sources.
Strengths
  • Actually uses websites — fills forms, clicks, checks out
  • Built into ChatGPT
  • Good for repetitive web tasks
  • Open weights you can self-host
  • Strong reasoning + math
  • Near-free API pricing
  • DeepSeek-V3 / R1 are serious models
  • 2–3× forward-pass and ~2× backward-pass speedup over FLA Triton kernels on Hopper GPUs
  • Gate-driven automatic intra-card context parallelism boosts SM utilization in long-sequence, small-head-count regimes without manual config
  • Hardware-friendly algebraic reformulation reduces Tensor Core, CUDA Core, and SFU overhead with no numerical precision loss
  • MIT licensed and fully open-source — drop it straight into Qwen3.x training and inference pipelines
  • Pull live data from Stripe, Slack, Google Analytics, etc.
  • AI functions inside cells
  • Modern UX
Weaknesses
  • Slow vs doing it yourself
  • Breaks on complex auth flows
  • $200/mo gate
  • Data goes to servers in China — privacy concerns for business use
  • Chinese policy filters
  • English polish trails Western models
  • Extremely narrow hardware requirement: SM90+ only (H100/H200, DGX Spark) with CUDA 12.8+ and PyTorch 2.8+ — useless outside Hopper-class clusters
  • GDN/Qwen-specific: not a drop-in replacement for FlashAttention-style softmax kernels, and won't help you if you're not running linear-attention Qwen models
  • Very new, minimal community adoption or third-party validation yet
  • Not a full Excel replacement for heavy users
  • Integrations best on paid tiers
Kai's verdictB-tier. Still early. Manus is more flexible for less money.S-tier for price/performance. A-tier for consumer use. If you build apps, this is the budget pick.A genuinely impressive, laser-focused kernel optimization from the Qwen team — real speedups on real hardware — but its utility is gated behind Hopper GPUs and Qwen's GDN architecture, making it a niche power tool rather than a broadly useful library. (Verdict pending Phi's full review.)A-tier. The most interesting spreadsheet in years. Great for ops dashboards.
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