Compare AI tools
Side-by-side: what they do, what they cost, what Kai actually thinks. Pass up to 4 tools via ?tools=claude,chatgpt,gemini.
Pick tools (4 selected)
Dev Platform
Coding
Image
Productivity
Writing
Marketing
Stripe Link A | GitHub Copilot B | Aider A | Lex A | |
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| Tagline | A digital wallet that lets AI agents spend on your behalf — without ever seeing your actual card number. | Microsoft/GitHub's autocomplete. Deep VS Code + JetBrains integration. | Terminal-based AI pair programmer. Git-aware, model-flexible. | Google Docs with an AI collaborator baked in. |
| Category | Agents | Coding | Coding | Writing |
| Pricing | Free for consumers; standard Stripe per-transaction fees for merchants | Free (limited) + $10/mo Pro + $19/mo Business | Free (open source) + whatever API you use | Free + $12/mo |
| Best for | Anyone running autonomous AI agents (shopping bots, booking assistants, personal AI) who wants delegated payment capability without handing over raw card data. | Teams with GitHub already. Devs who don't want to change IDEs. | Developers who want open-source tooling with full control. | Essays, long-form drafts, thinking on the page. |
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| Kai's verdict | Stripe Link is the most credible first move toward a real agentic payment layer — the one-time-use card model is genuinely clever, and the existing merchant network gives it a head start no startup wallet can match. But the 'approve every transaction' UX will get old fast, and the hard part (autonomous spending with guardrails) is still on the roadmap. (Verdict pending Phi's full review.) | B-tier. Solid for autocomplete but the category moved past it. Pick Cursor unless you can't. | A-tier. The right answer if you want open-source + terminal-native + model-agnostic. | A-tier. Beautiful UX. The writing app I'd pick if I only wrote long-form. |
| Link | Open → | Open → | Open → | Open → |