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Symphony
A
FlashQLA
A
Rows
A
Claude Code
S
TaglineOpenAI's open-source daemon that turns your Linear board into an always-on coding agent factory — tickets go in, pull requests come out.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.Anthropic's CLI agent. Opus-powered, operates on your repo directly.
CategoryAgentsDev PlatformDataCoding
PricingFree (open-source)Free (MIT License, open-source)Free + $19-$89/user/moPart of Claude Pro/Max/Team plans
Best forEngineering teams already using Linear + OpenAI Codex who want to stop babysitting agent sessions and instead let the issue tracker drive autonomous coding at scale.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.Developers who want an agent, not autocomplete. Large refactors, tests, docs.
Strengths
  • Fully autonomous ticket-to-PR pipeline: every open Linear issue gets its own isolated Codex agent without manual supervision
  • Fault-tolerant Elixir/OTP architecture automatically restarts crashed agents and manages hundreds of concurrent runs
  • WORKFLOW.md keeps all orchestration policy version-controlled inside the repo, so agent behavior is reproducible and reviewable like code
  • Proven internal results: OpenAI reported a 500% increase in landed PRs on some teams within three weeks
  • Open spec encourages community re-implementations in any language, not just Elixir
  • 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
  • Runs locally, edits your actual files
  • Strong on large codebases with 1M context
  • Great at multi-step tasks
Weaknesses
  • Currently only supports Linear as an issue tracker — GitHub Issues and Jira integrations are not yet official
  • Only OpenAI Codex is officially supported as the agent runtime; other model integrations are community-contributed and incomplete
  • Self-hosted, Elixir-dependent engineering preview with no built-in sandboxing — not suitable for untrusted or production environments out of the box
  • 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
  • Terminal-based — learning curve
  • Can't be used without Claude subscription
Kai's verdictSymphony is the most architecturally serious 'issue tracker as control plane' approach yet — 15K GitHub stars in weeks confirms the idea resonates — but it's still a rough, self-hosted engineering preview that demands Elixir chops and a Linear-only workflow. (Verdict pending Phi's full review.)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.S-tier if you live in the terminal. Different shape than Cursor — complementary, not replacement.
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