On the one hand, it's good that we're seeing a lot of exploration in this space.
On the other, the trend seems to be everyone developing a million disparate tools that largely replicate the same functionality with the primary variation being greater-or-lesser lock-in to a particular set of services.
This is about the third tool this week I've taken a quick look at and thought "I don't see what this offers me that I don't already have with Roo, except only using Claude."
We're going to have to hit a collapse and consolidation cycle eventually, here. There's absolutely room for multiple options to thrive, but most of what I've seen lately has been "reimplement more or less the same thing in a slightly different wrapper."
Aeolun 9 hours ago [-]
I think the thing is that most of the people implementing stuff for Claude have already realized it’s just the best option available for… basically everything. I’ve switched to different models before, but I always come back to Sonnet or Opus for doing anything sensible.
dgunay 7 hours ago [-]
Claude may be arguably the best model, but why decide unilaterally for your users that they _have_ to use it?
If there's no particular feature that only Claude offers, this is just needless vendor lock-in. And what happens if another lab releases a model that suddenly trounces Claude at coding? Your users will leave for an app that supports the new hotness, and you won't be able to keep them because of a short-sighted architecture that cannot swap model providers.
int_19h 6 hours ago [-]
The situation with models right now is that to eke out that last bit of performance, you have to do some things in ways that are specific to the model in question - wording of prompts, when and where to introduce relevant parts into context etc.
threecheese 7 hours ago [-]
There’s value in Anthropic being able to optimize their model’s front end to fulfill whatever features they plan for CC - like tool calling. You point out a valid risk of lock-in, maybe this signals they are committed to being at the forefront of coding models (part of enterprise play)?
rblatz 7 hours ago [-]
While I prefer Cline/Roo at work where I have multiple API plans for AI models, for personal I have Claude Pro and that really only works with Claude code. The benefit is that I can use it on a $20 a month plan.
commandar 5 hours ago [-]
Roo can use Claude Code as a provider.
I mostly use Claude Code with a Max plan via Roo. I have the option of sending prompts to OpenRouter if I've hit usage limits or if I want to try a particular task with a different model (e.g., I'll sometimes flip to Gemini Pro if a particular task could benefit its large context windows).
dottjt 5 hours ago [-]
I wonder if LLMs are actually closer to programming languages, in the sense of how they'll proliferate amongst different companies/people/use cases. Like maybe OpenAI is considered the Java of LLMs, while Claude is more like Python etc.
block_dagger 3 hours ago [-]
ChatGPT feels more like CoffeeScript to me - theoretically a good idea at the time but bound to be replaced.
ubercow13 2 hours ago [-]
Claude doesn't seem very good at translation to me compared to GPT*. It also can't understand video like Gemini.
cameronh90 4 hours ago [-]
I'm finding GPT 5 (via Codex CLI on a pro subscription) is far better than Opus for my use cases. Much more than the small difference on swe-bench would suggest. However, the Codex CLI is so immature by comparison that I'm still mostly using Claude, and only escalating to Codex when Claude snookers itself.
9 hours ago [-]
kristo 7 hours ago [-]
This is true for now.
I built some workflows using Claude’s API and now wish I had used a wrapper so I could easily switch to try gpt-5 for the cost savings.
raincole 14 hours ago [-]
> the trend seems to be everyone developing a million disparate tools
Which is super cool. Like during the dawn of web 2.0 we had lots of aggregators and forums instead of "Reddit and others."
(I'm not saying it's good UX.)
commandar 13 hours ago [-]
To be clear: having a diversity of tools is a good thing! I like having options.
My complaint is more that right now it feels like everybody is rushing to fill the exact same space with the exact same feature sets.
It's resulting in a lot of superficial diversity that's functionally homogenous. I want to see more applications that are pushing the capabilities of current AI tooling in creative directions.
turtlebits 13 hours ago [-]
If you don't care about bleeding edge, most of these will fall to the wayside and a few superior options will win out.
Otherwise, you're going to see the variations on the same thing over and over, which is totally fine, and where innovation comes from.
Personally, I just use stock VS Code (copilot) and Cursor.
latexr 13 hours ago [-]
> Like during the dawn of web 2.0 we had lots of aggregators and forums instead of "Reddit and others."
So, in other words, this is the exact opposite? “Lost of aggregators and forums” meant diversity. Lots of small players doing their own thing. What we have now is a handful of big players, and then tons of small players accessing those services with a different coat of paint. It’s like if the web you mention consisted of lots of people doing alternative interfaces to access Facebook and Reddit.
herval 12 hours ago [-]
> lots of people doing alternative interfaces to access Facebook and Reddit.
So… what we had on web 2 then, with its daily twitter clients? There were hundreds and hundreds of them
latexr 11 hours ago [-]
Twitter wasn’t nearly as big or influential, that comparison doesn’t hold. Furthermore, I was replying directly to the reference of “lots of aggregators and forums instead of "Reddit and others."”, which obviously excludes Twitter as part of the “others”.
6 hours ago [-]
ramoz 12 hours ago [-]
And then the providers ship a landmark feature or overhaul themselves. Especially as their models advance.
Wrappers constantly live in the support and feature parity of today.
Anthropic’s Claude Code will look a hell of a lot different a year from now, probably more like an OS for developers and Claude Agent non-tech. Regardless they are eating the stack.
Pricing/usage will be very simple - a fixed subscription and we will no longer know the tokenomics because the provider will have greatly abstracted and optimized the cost per token, favoring a model that they can optimize margin against a fixed revenue floor.
commandar 11 hours ago [-]
>Pricing/usage will be very simple - a fixed subscription and we will no longer know the tokenomics because the provider will have greatly abstracted and optimized the cost per token, favoring a model that they can optimize margin against a fixed revenue floor.
Personally, I think it's far more likely that a year from now either SotA models will have shifted elsewhere or Anthropic will have changed their pricing model to something less favorable than the current MAX plans. Either of those scenarios could suddenly result in the current Claude subscription models either not existing or no longer being the screaming deal they are now. I think it's exceedingly unlikely we see any major provider go to an unmetered business model any time soon.
And if you've built your entire workflow around tooling specific to Anthropic's services, suddenly you have an even bigger problem than just switching to a more cost effective provider. That's one of the bigger reasons I'm very skeptical of these wrappers around CC generally.
Even Claude Code itself isn't doing anything that couldn't and hasn't been done by other tools other than being tied to a really cheap way to use Claude.
petesergeant 6 hours ago [-]
Claude’s wide adoption makes it more likely Anthropic will stay SotA, as do the max plans. This is the training data they crave to be able to improve, and it’s costing them peanuts while identifying customers who’ll pay and building loyalty. The data flywheel enabled by Claude is the closest thing to a vault any of the models have right now.
qcnguy 53 minutes ago [-]
Do they have such a flywheel? I remember I had to specifically opt-in to sharing my Claude Code sessions with them. I think by default they aren't training on people's sessions.
commandar 5 hours ago [-]
Anthropic's models are fantastic, but they are -- by far -- one of the most expensive providers on an API basis. That's a large part of what makes the Max plans a great deal, right now.
Even on a Max plan, it's not hard to completely blow through your usage limits if you try to use Opus heavily.
All it takes is another provider to land a combination of model and cost that makes Code less of a deal for vendor lock-in to become a problem.
zarzavat 11 hours ago [-]
I'm more optimistic. Open source and open weights will eat this whole space.
Training is capital-intensive, yes, but so far it appears that there will always be some entities willing to train models and release them for free. All it takes is a slowdown at the frontier for the open models to catch up.
The money is in the hardware, not the software.
unethical_ban 11 hours ago [-]
I still can't figure out how to set up a completely free, completely private/no-accounts method of connecting an IDE to LM Studio. I thought it would be "Continue" extension for VS Code, but even for local LM integration it insists I sign-in to their service before continuing.
mikestaas 10 hours ago [-]
Roo code in vs code, and qwen coder in lm studio is a decent local only combo.
omneity 7 hours ago [-]
Strongly seconding Roo Code. I am using it in VSCodium and it's the perfect partner for a fully local coding workflow (nearly 100% open-source too so no vendor is going to pry it from my hand, "ever").
Qwen Coder 30B is my main driver in this configuration and in my experience is quite capable. It runs at 80 tok/s on my M3 Max and I'm able to use it for about 30-50% of my coding tasks, the most menial ones. I am exploring ways to RL its approach to coding so it fits my style a bit more and it's a very exciting prospect whenever I manage to figure it out.
The missing link is autocomplete since Roo only solves the agent part. Continue.dev does a decent job at that but you really want to pair it with a high performance, large context model (so it fits multiple code sections + your recent changes + context about the repo and gives fast suggestions) and that doesn't seem feasible or enjoyable yet in a fully local setup.
taneq 10 hours ago [-]
Huh? I have Continue on Codium talking to ollama, all local, and I never signed up to nuffin’
calvinmorrison 10 hours ago [-]
So I work at a company that sells a product that is part of a larger ecosystem. the parent company has spent 35 years NOT having a solution to our niche. There are others like us too in the space. Some do WMS, some do EDI, etc.
So depending on the parent company, they may prefer to have a - to be a little enterprisey - set of ISVs that are better in specifc domains.
bigyabai 11 hours ago [-]
> a fixed subscription and we will no longer know the tokenomics because the provider will have greatly abstracted
This is definitely not how most compute-constrained cloud services end up looking. Your cloud storage provider doesn't charge you a flat rate for 5tb/month of storage, and no amount of financier economics can get Claude there either.
robwwilliams 8 hours ago [-]
Wait, aren’t you describing Dropbox?
7 hours ago [-]
marxism 9 hours ago [-]
I've been contributing to an open source mobile app [1] that takes two swings at offering something that Roo does not have.
1. Real-time sync of CLI coding agent state to your phone. Granted this doesn't give you any new coding capabilities, you won't be making any different changes from your phone. And I would still chose to make a code change on my computer. But the fact that it's only slightly worse (you just wish you had a bigger screen) is still an innovation. Making Claude Code usable from anywhere changes when you can work, even if it doesn't change what you can do. I wrote a post trying to explain why this matters in practice. https://happy.engineering/docs/features/real-time-sync/
2. Another contributor is experimenting with a separate voice agent in between you and Claude Code. I've found it usable and maybe even nice? The voice agent acts like a buffer to collect and compact half backed think out loud ideas into slightly better commands for Claude Code. Another contributor wrote a blog post about why voice coding on your phone while out of the house is useful. They explained it better than I can. https://happy.engineering/docs/features/voice-coding-with-cl...
This is awesome. I’ve tried several of the mobile setups and this worked like a charm without any fiddling.I’ve been using termius + tailscale but this is much better UX. Thanks!
TheTaytay 4 hours ago [-]
This looks awesome, but I was surprised to see the relay server being necessary. Can I self-host that too?
marxism 3 hours ago [-]
Why a relay server? I want an app to just work with no fuss while running an AI agent on arbitrary consumer hardware. Having both the mobile app and agent wrapper process connect outwards through any firewalls and networks to a third computer on the public internet is the most boring and dumb way for it always to work.
Plus I wanted a system that did not require the app and the computer running the AI agent to both be online at the same time. Having a third computer act as a dumb mailbox handles some corner cases I care about.
I've been trying to surreptitiously get claude code and an oven specific MCP server to run on my friend's smart oven for a prank. However this oven enters a low power state when you don't interact with it; killing the network connection. My vision is to queue up commands via the mobile app with fuzzy logic, and then have the oven make weird noises as determined by claude code at some later point when they go to make a pizza or something.
marxism 3 hours ago [-]
Yes you can self host the relay server (and please do so!). If you are like me and already have Mac Mini in a closet running docker, k3s, or just have a friend group kubernetes cluster, you can get it running in about 3 minutes.
There is a Dockerfile, plus a docker-compose.yaml, and a complete Kubernetes template as well.
iambateman 8 hours ago [-]
Woah, cool! Having a phone connection to Claude code is something I’ve been looking for
zblevins 7 hours ago [-]
I currently do this with Termius and ssh into the box I’m working on the launching Claude Code. Only issue I have is the occasional network issue causing the session to drop.
TheTaytay 4 hours ago [-]
You likely know this, but in case you don’t: Termius makes it easy to use “mosh”, which makes your connection resistant to network drops and resumable. I am experimenting with it right now. Once you install mosh on your serve, click the “mosh” setting in the connection settings in Termius, and you are good to go.
msikora 9 hours ago [-]
The idea here is an IDE for Claude Code specifically. is most likely the strongest coding agent right now, but not everyone loves the command line only interface. So I totally get it.
noodletheworld 9 hours ago [-]
Is a whole IDE really the solution though?
There are already a plugins to use claude code in other IDEs.
This “Ill write a whole IDE because you get the best UX” seems like its a bit of a fallacy.
There are lots of ways you could do that.
A standalone application is just convenient for your business/startup/cross sell/whatever.
keyle 6 hours ago [-]
These are the typical effects of being "in a bubble" stage of evolution.
Lots of competing actors doing lots of similar things with confusing comparisons and quantifiable results.
scottgg 14 hours ago [-]
I’m assuming/hoping this is gonna end up as regular plugins for existing IDEs
commandar 14 hours ago [-]
That's kind of what I mean though.
Because I mentioned it and it's what I use daily: Roo is a VSCode extension. So you get the entire VSCode ecosystem for free. On the AI specific side, it has every feature this app highlights on its homepage and more. It works with just about any API provider and model you could ask for.
I could probably translate my existing workflow over to Claudia pretty easily, but what does that get me? A slightly different interface seems to be about it.
That's the question I keep hitting with these new tool announcements.
scottgg 14 hours ago [-]
Didn’t know about roo! But I’m with you; I don’t see why folks are investing their efforts in building more of these shiny wrappers, and what their expected end game could be.
OJFord 11 hours ago [-]
Yeah, it's absolutely a ('quick, sell shovels') gold rush. Too much that's the same and not enough big/different thinking, it'll take time, and as a buyer I'm not rushing in to buying too much of the early crap, personally.
rovr138 14 hours ago [-]
Not tied to VSCode is a big one for me. This one is agnostic.
Continue.dev has some features, but it’s on VSCode and Jetbrains
commandar 14 hours ago [-]
If you're opposed to using VSCode for whatever reason, that's reasonable. Though, for me personally, the fact that it only lets you use Claude Code strikes me as a much larger negative on net. It's not at all agnostic in terms of AI provider.
That said, VSCode is a popular platform for this for exactly the reason I think consolidation is eventually inevitable: it's got a huge preexisting ecosystem. There are extensions for practically anything you could ask for.
There's likely room for some standalone, focused apps in this space. I just don't see the current wave of "we put a wrapper around Claude Code and gave it some basic MCP and custom prompt management tools like a dozen other applications this week" being sustainable.
They're all going to end up on their own tiny islands unless there's a reason for an ecosystem to develop around them.
breakfastduck 13 hours ago [-]
There are lots and lots and lots of us that don't like using VSCode, want to use our own IDE of choice and use Claude Code. Terminal / standalone app is best for me there or even better an IDE plugin.
A tiny island is fine for a tool like this - not everything needs an 'ecosystem'.
commandar 13 hours ago [-]
The thing about tiny islands isn't that every tool needs a sprawling ecosystem to thrive. It's that applications that don't develop a userbase tend to die. This is as true of open source apps as it is commercial ones.
Typically, applications develop a userbase when they offer something that people can't find elsewhere.
What I'm saying isn't "everyone should be using VScode extensions for this"; it's "I see nothing to distinguish this from a bunch of other functionally identical applications and people just keep building them." I literally don't see a single unique feature promoted on the landing page.
My fundamental point is that we're in a gold rush phase where people are all building the same thing. We'll eventually see a handful of apps get popular and effort swell around those instead of everyone reimplementing the same thing. And my money is on that looking a lot like it usually does: the winners will be the apps that find some way to differentiate themselves.
serf 14 hours ago [-]
"agnostically gnostic".
you give up one side of freedom (the ide) for the other (the backend).
mccoyb 13 hours ago [-]
There's few new ideas in this space, it's pretty boring.
How many ways can you wrap (multiple agents, worktrees, file manager, diff viewer, accept reject loops, preset specifications for agents) -- let's try Electron! Let's try Tauri! Let's try a different TUI!
What if we sat down and really thought about how these agentic IDEs should feel first instead of copy pasting the ideas to get something out to acquire market and mind share? That's significantly harder, and more worthwhile.
That's how these agentic front ends should be advertised: "Claude Code, plus _our special feature_" and then one can immediately see if the software is filled or devoid of interesting ideas.
ako 11 hours ago [-]
As the code generation tools improve, this will only get worse. Having gen ai build a clone of something with some minor differences will become easier and easier.
rbren 8 hours ago [-]
> with the primary variation being greater-or-lesser lock-in
All the more reason to embrace a fully open source stack. We need to go hard on "lesser".
lerp-io 4 hours ago [-]
deleted roo code vs code extension as soon as i tried claude code, ppl really need to stop trying to extend the editor lol
arunc 12 hours ago [-]
May I know what the other 2 tools are?
marxism 11 hours ago [-]
If the "on the go" experience is important to you, i.e. you actually want some care and intention put into the phone experience. There are 4 apps I'm aware of:
- Happy Claude Code Client: open source (MIT) effort for a quality mobile app
- Omnara: closed source mobile app, $9/month
- CodeRemote: closed source mobile app, $49/month
- Kisuke: closed source mobile app, private beta, unknown price
If you know of others, I would appreciate a PR to update the table I put together, or just let me know and I'll add it.
There are more more desktop apps, probably because those are easier to design.
ukuina 6 hours ago [-]
OpenAI Codex is available on the mobile app.
6 hours ago [-]
paulddraper 13 hours ago [-]
> primary variation being greater-or-lesser lock-in to a particular set of services
> I don't see what this offers me that I don't already have with Roo
Ironic >-< for an AI tool tied to a specific IDE
11 hours ago [-]
yieldcrv 14 hours ago [-]
I was with a fairly well acclimated woman the other day and mentioned something about chatgpt’s voice, she acted confused and asked if that was the paid version (it is)
But long story short she showed me what she had on her iphone and it was a totally different app that wrapped a text chat interface around chatgpt, it wasn’t even themed like to be a persona or anything but was at the expense of any multimodal capabilities
Just caught me off guard about how common that might be
wisemang 9 hours ago [-]
My (somewhat elderly) father only refers to it as ChatGBT and when I tried to get to the bottom of why he said it’s because “thats what it’s called in my phone”.
Seems pretty scammy to me, akin to typo squatting with potential to collect a lot more personal information but he can’t always be reasoned with.
Hopefully he heeds my advice to not provide anything personal.
platelminto 10 hours ago [-]
Tried it out for a bit - recently upgraded to Max so was willing to try one of these run-stuff-in-parallel tools.
It wasn't great.
- Installation using the provided binaries just fails on my machine - I have Ubuntu 22.04, which apparently has too old a version of glibc. Building from sourced worked though.
- Every time I want to open a new chat, it brings me back to the project list. I don't want to click on the same project every time!
- Scrolling is awful! It's slow, and it often doesn't automatically scroll down as the chat is generated so you have to do it yourself.
- There's no title or anything across sessions. If I'm now working on multiple things at the same time, I want to know what I'm working on quickly!
- The log/text entries take up so much space. Something like this would benefit from a much more compact view - it shouldn't use my entire screen to show me 1 TODO list and 1 tool use.
- Unlike the video, the code changes are all wrapped in a "AI Summary" entry which tells me what it did in a few words, with no option (that I could find) to open the code itself. Confused, couldn't find a setting for this.
- There's multiple UI bugs, and it's sluggish overall.
I didn't use the Agents stuff, which (given the video starts with it) might be the main focus? But as it stands, for my attempt at running multiple Claude Code sessions at once, this was too buggy to really work. Someone else mentioned https://conductor.build/, which might be more what I'm looking for, but unfortunately it lacks Linux support.
I hope it gets better! I could see myself using it after a few more releases, and I'm rooting for them - just sharing my experience here for others who are considering trying it.
yen223 5 hours ago [-]
Agreed
I'm not as tied to the cli as other folks here, but even I found the Claude Code cli to be a better experience than this too.
I think it will improve, but for now I'm sticking with the cli.
dostick 7 hours ago [-]
The desktop companion is not the problem that needs to be solved. It seems that every developer who successfully used CC and go on to create some tool for it is doing it for the wrong reasons or because they have to do just something.
CC development is not just development, not all types of development. it’s frontend JS based , and it’s backend development. Only those scenarios work.
Try creating native desktop or mobile app and it’s like a swamp of trial and error.
You have to learn by trial and error what documentation sets and instructions you have to provide at which moment and context and balance at with token cost.. it’s a multi dimensional problem for which there are no recipes that work.
On top of that your direct instructions to not use particular patterns or approaches gets forgotten and ignored y CC with later “you’re right, I should have…”. I am starting to think it’s not solvable by the user by providing docs, examples and instructions. That Claude must have native development baked in to the same level as they baked in the frontend and backend.
What I am getting to is - make a tool to manage those doc sets and contexts and instructions and allow to share those sets between users globally as recipes.
extr 5 hours ago [-]
It's already a solved problem. Just use GPT-5-Thinking (or Pro) to create a highly detailed spec to execute against. You can also download the entire docs/source code for whatever libraries you're using and tell the AI to reference/search it as needed. Works great.
OtherShrezzing 2 hours ago [-]
Could you show an example of a native desktop app (or a similarly complex app) being worked on with this approach?
Move fast and break things. Being edgy like this is what VC's want to see.
robwwilliams 8 hours ago [-]
Grab Claudet and Claudette quick!
verdverm 6 hours ago [-]
More than that, the peer comments would support trademark issues
preommr 14 hours ago [-]
I definitely thought this was an anthropic thing that they were trying to spin off into it's own website and app for normies.
I am not saying it's infringement, I am just saying that my dumb brain made that connection and I feel like it's not unreasonable to assume that other people might as well.
mirsadm 14 hours ago [-]
I also made the assumption. Once I found out it wasn't it was a huge red flag. I don't like it at all.
type0 2 hours ago [-]
Once Anthropic starts receiving a wave of support tickets they would be forced to change their name, CLAUDia is just a misspelled ClaudAi
iamflimflam1 14 hours ago [-]
Agreed - I was about to send this round to my colleagues.
For once reading the comments first has paid off!
IshKebab 12 hours ago [-]
This is exactly why trademarks exist, and why if they want to bother, Anthropic can 100% make them change the name.
Same reason you can't release a handheld console called the Gamegirl, or a voice assistant called Alexis.
time0ut 11 hours ago [-]
Oh wow. I thought it was anthropic even after skimming the site. The color scheme and styling is pretty similar. That feels a little slimy.
mirekrusin 13 hours ago [-]
Same here, first thing I did was to scroll down to see company in the footer and nope... somebody will be receiving legal letters soon I'd guess.
tibbon 9 hours ago [-]
Same. But of course, I checked the GitHub first, and I really dislike this confusion. I don't trust someone with my AI tools that's acting like they are trying to trick me into giving them sensitive access. Nope.
14 hours ago [-]
rane 14 hours ago [-]
How will they make money?
nextworddev 14 hours ago [-]
Hosted version… like every oss project…
fourthark 8 hours ago [-]
AGPL suggests you are correct
hk__2 14 hours ago [-]
It’s a desktop app.
nextworddev 13 hours ago [-]
many desktop apps have hosted versions
hk__2 13 hours ago [-]
I can’t think of any free desktop app that would have a non-free hosted version.
bigyabai 14 hours ago [-]
Step 1: Manufacture a bunch of low-quality "good enough" codebases
Step 2: Turn around and sell security-as-a-service to the most profitable products
mirekrusin 13 hours ago [-]
The only way there is to make money - from VCs.
giovannibonetti 10 hours ago [-]
It seems to be a side-gig to bring attention to their company. Well done.
schappim 12 hours ago [-]
Very much feels like we're in the "Twitter client" phase of LLM IDEs...
seabrookmx 7 hours ago [-]
This is a good take. And the fate of these tools seems like it's going to be similar.
ysofunny 10 hours ago [-]
what happend after the Twitter client phase???
InGoodFaith 10 hours ago [-]
didn't the underlying API they built upon ramp up their pricing and effectively price them out?
like a precursor to reddit's own API pricing changes that made it hard for 3rd party clients to compete.
The saving grace with these API wrappers is that local models being a thing can still let them hedge against the underlying AI labs eating up their stack.
schappim 10 hours ago [-]
The fate of Twitterrific and Apollo for Reddit come to mind.
stevenpetryk 7 hours ago [-]
Wow, I really miss Apollo. I haven’t used Reddit since it got priced out.
TheDong 5 hours ago [-]
Most of the clients were pretty bland and bad, made by Apple fanboys who believed that form was more important than function.
Tweetdeck came out as the leader over the rest (mainly due to having actual functionality), and about a year after it was the clear victor (2011) twitter acquired them, and slowly integrated them into twitter properly (though they killed a bunch of features along the way intentionally).
Fast forward to the musk takeover, and twitter's API pricing changed such that making a third-party client is infeasible.
I think a lot of the same is likely to apply here.
It's a winner-takes-all market, there's a bunch of people iterating on form and ignoring function, and the winner will be based more on function than form.
If there's a clear winner on function, one of the AI companies can acquire and integrate it.
11 hours ago [-]
alphazard 15 hours ago [-]
Does this sandbox the agents? All I want is a way to keep the agents from writing to and reading from arbitrary places on the filesystem. I want that enforced using operating system primitives rather than a pinky promise with an LLM.
It already worries me that the Cursor agents occasionally try to perform operations with full absolute paths, which they wouldn't be able to know if they were properly sandboxed to the current directory.
muratsu 11 hours ago [-]
I’ve recently built something which runs helps you run cc in cloud sandboxes maybe that would be helpful: https://www.devfleet.ai
johnfn 14 hours ago [-]
You can solve this yourself with a little elbow grease with Docker + a devcontainer. I did this and I’m very happy with the results - Claude can do anything it wants, but it can’t push to prod.
throwaway-0001 6 hours ago [-]
Every dev container needs to login again, can’t use browser mcp, high cpu.. still a few issues
__MatrixMan__ 12 hours ago [-]
Why not just run the assistant as a user with limited permissions? Your OS likely supplies all the handcuffs you're going to need.
I think OpenAI's Codex does this. Not sure to what degree, but sandboxing seems to be a priority for that project. Possibly to their detriment since last time I tried it it was not nearly as good as Claude Code.
dgunay 8 hours ago [-]
Codex-cli does use MacOS sandboxing by default. It does unfortunately cause issues for my workflow because the agent is very restricted in what it is allowed to do (like, read/write the Go build cache) and its command whitelisting configurability is currently nonexistent. I'm looking into using containers to allow the agent more autonomy within its environment.
gorbypark 15 hours ago [-]
You could try sandbox-exec. It’s kind of depreciated but was more or less designed for this exact use case I think. It’s too bad Apple doesn’t really support it anymore (although it still works in my limited testing!)
xixixao 15 hours ago [-]
Too bad OSs have such lock-in. Having a macOS with great sandboxing per folder + os capability to avoid the docker hellscape would be awesome. Probably not gonna happen until we can oneshot an OS rewrite :)
If you use VS:Code, Anthropic provides an example DevContainer.
kelnos 14 hours ago [-]
I get that some people go that way, but to me, the fact that Claude Code is a standalone terminal app is a strength, not a weakness. I don't really want or need a GUI here. "From Terminal Chaos to Visual Clarity" doesn't resonate with me; terminals to me are simpler and more structured.
At most, I've been thinking about installing one of the extensions to integrate Claude Code into (neo)vim, but even that I'm not sure I really want or need.
But for people who arm themselves to the teeth with GUIs and IDEs, I guess I can see the appeal.
christiangenco 14 hours ago [-]
I'm with you on desktop but I've been craving some sort of way to interact with Claude Code from my phone while I'm out and about.
What I want at the core is to be able to open up access to my laptop's currently running Claude Code instance (without all these hacky backdoors that fork the chat with every message by using `--print`; I want a first class API that lets me append messages to the current chat), then I want to be able to send messages (with voice transcription) and approve/deny permissions and see the code diffs and all of that.
Maybe something like a Telegram bot? I had hopes for Claude Code UI[1] but the web interface is too clunky on mobile.
I have been using VibeTunnel from the iPad. Probably not good for a phone, but on a slightly larger screen it's great. The tailscale integration makes it super easy.
metadat 13 hours ago [-]
Pretty neat, links included below for convenience:
Many of my claude tasks get frequently get stuck over small stuff, or require input from me, so I had Claude whip up something comparable in a few minutes. Now I can keep them moving remotely with ease and not be stuck in front of a desktop monitoring them! It's dreamy.
resonious 10 hours ago [-]
I use Termux and ssh for this. Plus Zellij/tmux. Classic stuff I used to do for regular dev back 10 years ago.
My phone also can build and run many projects on its own so I often don't even connect to the laptop.
kelnos 14 hours ago [-]
What's your use case / use need for this flow? Personally I really do not want to do this sort of thing from my phone. I just can't see "coding" from my phone as anything but clunky and unpleasant, even with an assistant.
(Not to mention that if I only have my phone, I'm probably out doing something where I don't want to be working...)
dvno42 13 hours ago [-]
Similar request as the parent, my use case is I setup a long prompt/task and like to go for a walk around the block to get my legs moving. Being able to "move the llm along" and make small modifications from my phone would be nice. Personally, I'd never do a long session that way but the chance to move my legs while it does a long task but not get stuck on a simple question in the claude tool would be lovely.
use Termius (shell client for iOS devices). put your phone and laptop/desktop on the same VPN. SSH in, use Claude Code normally from anywhere
sibeliuss 15 hours ago [-]
That video on the homepage is insane... please for the sake of your amazing app, slow it down and make it less frantic!
(Super rapid zooming in and out, flying all over screen at 3x speed, must cover eyes!!)
canogat 13 hours ago [-]
Engineers often see no value in what marketers do. This video is what they don't do.
dcreater 13 hours ago [-]
It stuns me how bad many engineers are in basic communication.
Made something? Dont start with a long, protracted "This is how i built it from step 1". Show the damn thing! Then tell me how you built which i will be interested in only if the product is good to begin with.
svantana 13 hours ago [-]
Wait, you are somehow sure that no marketer was involved in making this video? Seems unlikely
nperez 15 hours ago [-]
Agreed 100%. When you work on an app every day, it all makes sense to see the cool features flash by, but you need to design for people who don't have a clue what your app does.
Tempest1981 7 hours ago [-]
All that manic zooming... reminded me of Wayne's World:
Ah bummer for the creators. This’ll almost certainly result in them having to change their name. Thing is, it’s not malicious on Anthropic’s part if they do C&D them. It’s actually a requirement if they don’t want to risk losing their own mark.
tibbon 9 hours ago [-]
I had to check on their Github to see that this wasn't an official tool.
I don't want to install a tool like this that isn't made by Anthropic.
I, too, find this confusing and actively dislike the naming and association here.
chis 15 hours ago [-]
Really good idea, I’ll have to try it out. The thing I really want is to have the ability to give a recipe for a new Claude code instance - spin up a docker image with code, data, and a running server and then let Claude work against that.
smithclay 13 hours ago [-]
Hey, it's not well known but Anthropic actually publishes their own devcontainer feature layer for this (1). Many different CLI wrappers and tools are starting to imbed it (2) but is a nice DIY/open-source way to sandbox.
I've developed a system that checks out a git repo into a docker compose container, tells claude to read a feature story, then implement it with --dangerously-skip-permissions turned on within the container. It work well enough.
I think it's another workflow, that might suit your needs, but I think the real magic continues to be in the model. Similarly, I'm sure Claudia adds some nice window dressing.
Eventually folks will settle in on some local maxima for interaction and software development with LLMs. Who know what it will look like? It'd be nice if whatever comes next bumps the industry out of the current scrum and sprint style workflows, if only to break folks out of the theatrics of these software personas and rituals.
I’ve used something similar, it’s a good workflow!
TheTaytay 15 hours ago [-]
I’ve been wanting the same thing. I am currently experimenting with a container that adds what I want. I keep wanting my sandboxed dev machine that is preconfigured with Claude (and almost nothing else)…but then I also want my customized Claude. I saw someone here on HN the other day who just spins up a Docker container and shares their home directory Claude files with it to facilitate the customized Claude container:
You can do this with devcontainer and still work within VSCode.
15 hours ago [-]
vunderba 15 hours ago [-]
Agree would feel far more comfortable if each Claudia project was a separate docker container that was spun up with the appropriate tooling (Node, Python, etc.) particularly with flags like `--dangerously-skip-permissions`.
There is an outstanding feature request around it at least:
for info: "Claudia" as a name happens to be already in use by another open source project: Claudia the audio session management tool (for the JACK/LADISH APIs i.e. typically on Linux), part of the KxStudio audio tools suite by Filipe Coelho (falkTX) and the KxStudio community: https://kx.studio/Applications:Claudia
IshKebab 12 hours ago [-]
Nobody cares dude. It's a totally different thing. Names can overlap if the difference is obvious.
What people do care about is where names imply some relationship that isn't true. In this case the name Claudia strongly implies that this is an official Claude-related product. They'll get a cease and desist soon enough if this actually becomes popular.
_joel 1 hours ago [-]
I care, it's confusing
simoncion 11 hours ago [-]
I care. I like hearing about JACK tools, and hadn't previously heard of either Claudia or LADISH.
Thanks, OP!
tomtomtomtomtom 3 hours ago [-]
I am going to give it a try. I like the idea. One thing, slow down the main animation on your home page, like a lot. And add a about us and contact section to your webiste, you want to gain the trust of the visitors.
trevor-e 13 hours ago [-]
Personally I like the UI for https://conductor.build/ a lot more than this, although I'll have to give it a try.
I see a lot of commenters asking why a GUI is necessary. When you're running several agents in parallel it becomes very handy compared to the terminal. I can easily see the status of each which I haven't found a good equivalent for when using terminal tabs. Also it handles automatically creating git worktrees for each agent which is great.
sejje 11 hours ago [-]
Try not using tabs, that's my recommendation.
You can tile terminals, you can use things like tmux to insert multiple command lines into one window, etc.
divan 13 hours ago [-]
I like that it's not mutually exclusive with normal Claude Code usage in terminal.
Question about Dashboard - I'm on subscription plan, and Dashboard shows - "Total Cost: $XX.YY". Is it somehow representitive towards how much credit I used in my plan, or it's just showing a costs it would take if I was using API instead?
newshackr 9 hours ago [-]
There is no way this name sticks. I thought it was from anthropic at first
msikora 9 hours ago [-]
So I tried it for a hot minute a few weeks ago, but uninstalled promptly once it looked like it just cannot handle pasted images very well at all. It would paste it as huge Base64 string right in there and completely lock up the UI on my MacBook Pro M3 Max. Has that been fixed?
I'm really looking for a good IDE (or something better than just a terminal) for Claude Code, but I was left disappointed by Claudia...
Well, my project is not using GitHub. Why does it need GitHub access?
herval 12 hours ago [-]
This site could use about 2 thousand fewer words and perhaps one or two images…
chamomeal 7 hours ago [-]
Indicative of a lot of AI-generated content
mogili 14 hours ago [-]
Not sure what problem it solves on top of Claude Code. I tried it a while back when this was posted but didn't find it very useful. This being a desktop app didn't make sense to me.
sejje 11 hours ago [-]
Many people don't like working in terminals. I'm not one of them, I live in a terminal--but those other people exist.
mosselman 13 hours ago [-]
That video is horrible I have no idea what is going on.
terhechte 14 hours ago [-]
I tried it some weeks ago, but I went back to the CLI. Honestly, I've been a GUI app for most of my life, preferring proper GUI tools to Terminal tools, including running the GUI versions of VIM and Emacs (during my brief emacs stint). However, over the past 2 weeks I've slowly transitioned to a full cli development setup with wezterm, neovim, lazygit, fzf, fish & Claude Code. I enjoy working like this so much.
sejje 11 hours ago [-]
> Honestly, I've been a GUI app for most of my life
Don't worry, someday you'll grow wiser and maybe you'll spend some time living as a CLI executable.
3 hours ago [-]
rubslopes 13 hours ago [-]
One thing that I'm missing from all of those Claude Code wrappers is the ability to search/replace and edit code. I'm mostly "vibing" nowadays, but often I face situations that editing the code by myself is faster than explaining it the AI.
kristjansson 13 hours ago [-]
The first-party CC IDE integrations (Code, JetBrains) let you edit the diff under review prior to approval. Not sure if it feeds back to the thread as a correction, or just relies on CC reading the file next time it needs to
LeicaLatte 11 hours ago [-]
Loving all these Claude Code as a Platform products. Hope Anthropic doesn't ban them once they become popular citing some vague TOS violation.
SOLAR_FIELDS 14 hours ago [-]
Part of the reason that I enjoy Claude code is because it has no GUI
eddieroger 14 hours ago [-]
I was thinking the same. I like that being in my terminal makes it feel closer to a build tool than not, because that's the space it fills for me. I like that, because it's a terminal, if I connect to my main machine through SSH, it's right there waiting for me. I'm not saying there isn't room in the world for both, but so far I haven't felt the need for a GUI tool in this space.
super256 5 hours ago [-]
I need this in my IDE, not as a Web app.
siva7 13 hours ago [-]
Sorry, i don't get who this is for. For those who want to use a CLI tool but don't like using a CLI? Also it's only for API metered use?
dgunay 8 hours ago [-]
Here's my personal workflow. I've built a relatively small (<5k LoC Go) CLI to facilitate it. Mostly vibe coded in a dogfooded fashion.
When I want to start an agent, I run a small command that takes in a prompt (and some optional flags but mostly the defaults are what I want). It does this:
1. Check out a worktree from a repo (defaults to my bread and butter repo with completions for the most active ~5 repos in my org)
2. Craft a command to launch an agent (supports codex, opencode, and gemini-cli because my company only gives us OpenAI keys).
3. Launch the command in a tmux session.
4. Exit 0.
There are some light integrations with Jira, GitHub, etc but they're accomplished by shelling out to other tools.
If I want to manage sessions, I've got tmux + fzf + other unixy tools old & new to manage them.
If I want to manage sessions remotely, there is vibetunnel. It would be cool to have a slicker AFK experience, but it works.
My silly little piece of vibe coded slop and duct tape, for my use case, is largely competitive with most of the offerings on the market, outside of the ones that do cloud-based environments. Some of these projects are VC funded teams of people working full time, I'm assuming. What a time to be alive.
I'm also amazed at how readily projects like this just embrace Claude Code lock-in. Is there really anything specific about it that other agent harnesses don't support? I haven't used it yet, but so far it just seems like it benefits in mindshare alone from being the default/first mover, not because it supports any particular feature the others do not. TBF I do hear that it is quite good.
Quality & polish is a compelling reason to _use_ something, but it's not a compelling reason to build walls IMO, especially in a space like this where context engineering techniques, prompts, etc are in no way secret sauce and can be readily copied.
jelambs 13 hours ago [-]
interesting, does it let you manage multiple claude code agents without having to spin up different git worktrees? we were discussing the other day how that's an annoying limitation of claude code compared to codex, and the friction in having to manage those different worktrees feels just not quite worth it.
rmonvfer 10 hours ago [-]
I just run them at the same time. As long as each instance is working in different parts of the codebase, there should be no problem. No worktrees needed!
Duplicake 12 hours ago [-]
This looks like it was written by Claude code as well as being for Claude code
Also saw this a couple months ago.
hk__2 13 hours ago [-]
The wording is bit akward given that Claudia is a female given name: you can "see Claudia in action", "get started with Claudia", run things "in Claudia". At least Claude is an agent, so it makes sense to give it a human name (which btw is neutral: in France you have both men and women called "Claude").
ComplexSystems 9 hours ago [-]
I really just want a UI to integrate this into VSCode...
Great design, but Vibe Kanban is a thing and it has a MCP server.
selectnull 14 hours ago [-]
"Terminal chaos?"
Yes, please :)
mirrormaru56 11 hours ago [-]
Well that didn' take long. There are so many Editors and IDE's now. I wonder how many will survive a year from now.
user3939382 13 hours ago [-]
Doesn’t make any sense to me. GUIs are discoverability tools. LLMs are essentially a runtime with a natural language interface. Why would it need a GUI wrapper? By definition its discoverability is already 100%.
sejje 11 hours ago [-]
> LLMs are essentially a runtime with a natural language interface
LLMs are that, but claude code is not.
10 hours ago [-]
pjmlp 13 hours ago [-]
In Electron, apparently, then provide a URL instead.
nsonha 3 hours ago [-]
all these tools just assume claude code, even though what they do is piping input into a cli that doesn't have to be claude.
maddynator 10 hours ago [-]
what are some of the agents that people have built using Claude?
15 hours ago [-]
theLiminator 15 hours ago [-]
Is this usable with local inference?
wild_pointer 13 hours ago [-]
No Windows support :(
warthog 14 hours ago [-]
I was invited to be a beta user by Anthropic who is releasing this - FYI
mi_lk 13 hours ago [-]
This is not made by Anthropic. You are either seriously misinformed, or lying
rmonvfer 14 hours ago [-]
What what? Are they working on a proper GUI? This is actually massive if true
JSteph22 14 hours ago [-]
So it's made by another company but "released" by Anthropic? What does that mean?
11 hours ago [-]
MunishMummadi 6 hours ago [-]
i don't want to be a boomer but their is a reason for cc to be a terminal experience. why do you even want to use it via GUI?
paulcole 13 hours ago [-]
> Claudia's Features: Everything You Need, Beautifully Designed
I’d really love to know what specifically about this is beautiful.
Steve Jobs says it and for 20+ years every tech bro parrots it mindlessly. “Oh do I think I did a good job on this? It must be beautifully designed.”
sejje 11 hours ago [-]
I agree, basically looks like a bootstrap website. Not the peak of beautiful design.
raybytes 44 minutes ago [-]
[dead]
cobbechampo 10 hours ago [-]
[dead]
kylebenzle 15 hours ago [-]
Been using Claude almost daily but can't understand the use case of this program? Seems like a step backwards?
cyb0rg1 13 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
Gys 14 hours ago [-]
Love the name
ldw_weit 14 hours ago [-]
I first read chlamydia…
hk__2 13 hours ago [-]
Never heard of Claudia Schiffer?
nicoslepicos 10 hours ago [-]
For folks interested in options for working with teams of agents like Claude Code in parallel, we're building Magnet
You can think of Magnet as your workspace for collaborating with your human & AI agent team mates. We let you quickly spin up Claude Code sandboxes for every issue, and we're also thinking about how AI can be more of a thought partner in building high-quality software.
We're thinking about this problem space more broadly than just trying to be a GUI for Claude Code (though that's already a great starting point).
These are a few of the themes we think about:
- How can we use AI to help you think critically about the features you're prioritizing and what to build next?
- How can we always assemble and provide exactly the right context for every issue you're working on?
- What are the best patterns for collaborating with your human & AI teammates, to ship the highest quality code?
- How can you best specify exactly what you want, and verify that it's what you hoped for?
Would love for y'all to try it, and I'll post a video of me building a product with Magnet a little later here - the tool's getting really fun to use!
We're also very open to feedback and try to incorporate learnings quickly! I spent a large part of this weekend using Magnet to fix most of the issues someone we onboarded Friday brought up
myflash13 10 hours ago [-]
Love it but I want an iOS companion app over Tailscale/LAN. Omnara without a central server.
On the other, the trend seems to be everyone developing a million disparate tools that largely replicate the same functionality with the primary variation being greater-or-lesser lock-in to a particular set of services.
This is about the third tool this week I've taken a quick look at and thought "I don't see what this offers me that I don't already have with Roo, except only using Claude."
We're going to have to hit a collapse and consolidation cycle eventually, here. There's absolutely room for multiple options to thrive, but most of what I've seen lately has been "reimplement more or less the same thing in a slightly different wrapper."
If there's no particular feature that only Claude offers, this is just needless vendor lock-in. And what happens if another lab releases a model that suddenly trounces Claude at coding? Your users will leave for an app that supports the new hotness, and you won't be able to keep them because of a short-sighted architecture that cannot swap model providers.
I mostly use Claude Code with a Max plan via Roo. I have the option of sending prompts to OpenRouter if I've hit usage limits or if I want to try a particular task with a different model (e.g., I'll sometimes flip to Gemini Pro if a particular task could benefit its large context windows).
I built some workflows using Claude’s API and now wish I had used a wrapper so I could easily switch to try gpt-5 for the cost savings.
Which is super cool. Like during the dawn of web 2.0 we had lots of aggregators and forums instead of "Reddit and others."
(I'm not saying it's good UX.)
My complaint is more that right now it feels like everybody is rushing to fill the exact same space with the exact same feature sets.
It's resulting in a lot of superficial diversity that's functionally homogenous. I want to see more applications that are pushing the capabilities of current AI tooling in creative directions.
Otherwise, you're going to see the variations on the same thing over and over, which is totally fine, and where innovation comes from.
Personally, I just use stock VS Code (copilot) and Cursor.
So, in other words, this is the exact opposite? “Lost of aggregators and forums” meant diversity. Lots of small players doing their own thing. What we have now is a handful of big players, and then tons of small players accessing those services with a different coat of paint. It’s like if the web you mention consisted of lots of people doing alternative interfaces to access Facebook and Reddit.
So… what we had on web 2 then, with its daily twitter clients? There were hundreds and hundreds of them
Wrappers constantly live in the support and feature parity of today.
Anthropic’s Claude Code will look a hell of a lot different a year from now, probably more like an OS for developers and Claude Agent non-tech. Regardless they are eating the stack.
Pricing/usage will be very simple - a fixed subscription and we will no longer know the tokenomics because the provider will have greatly abstracted and optimized the cost per token, favoring a model that they can optimize margin against a fixed revenue floor.
Personally, I think it's far more likely that a year from now either SotA models will have shifted elsewhere or Anthropic will have changed their pricing model to something less favorable than the current MAX plans. Either of those scenarios could suddenly result in the current Claude subscription models either not existing or no longer being the screaming deal they are now. I think it's exceedingly unlikely we see any major provider go to an unmetered business model any time soon.
And if you've built your entire workflow around tooling specific to Anthropic's services, suddenly you have an even bigger problem than just switching to a more cost effective provider. That's one of the bigger reasons I'm very skeptical of these wrappers around CC generally.
Even Claude Code itself isn't doing anything that couldn't and hasn't been done by other tools other than being tied to a really cheap way to use Claude.
Even on a Max plan, it's not hard to completely blow through your usage limits if you try to use Opus heavily.
All it takes is another provider to land a combination of model and cost that makes Code less of a deal for vendor lock-in to become a problem.
Training is capital-intensive, yes, but so far it appears that there will always be some entities willing to train models and release them for free. All it takes is a slowdown at the frontier for the open models to catch up.
The money is in the hardware, not the software.
Qwen Coder 30B is my main driver in this configuration and in my experience is quite capable. It runs at 80 tok/s on my M3 Max and I'm able to use it for about 30-50% of my coding tasks, the most menial ones. I am exploring ways to RL its approach to coding so it fits my style a bit more and it's a very exciting prospect whenever I manage to figure it out.
The missing link is autocomplete since Roo only solves the agent part. Continue.dev does a decent job at that but you really want to pair it with a high performance, large context model (so it fits multiple code sections + your recent changes + context about the repo and gives fast suggestions) and that doesn't seem feasible or enjoyable yet in a fully local setup.
So depending on the parent company, they may prefer to have a - to be a little enterprisey - set of ISVs that are better in specifc domains.
This is definitely not how most compute-constrained cloud services end up looking. Your cloud storage provider doesn't charge you a flat rate for 5tb/month of storage, and no amount of financier economics can get Claude there either.
1. Real-time sync of CLI coding agent state to your phone. Granted this doesn't give you any new coding capabilities, you won't be making any different changes from your phone. And I would still chose to make a code change on my computer. But the fact that it's only slightly worse (you just wish you had a bigger screen) is still an innovation. Making Claude Code usable from anywhere changes when you can work, even if it doesn't change what you can do. I wrote a post trying to explain why this matters in practice. https://happy.engineering/docs/features/real-time-sync/
2. Another contributor is experimenting with a separate voice agent in between you and Claude Code. I've found it usable and maybe even nice? The voice agent acts like a buffer to collect and compact half backed think out loud ideas into slightly better commands for Claude Code. Another contributor wrote a blog post about why voice coding on your phone while out of the house is useful. They explained it better than I can. https://happy.engineering/docs/features/voice-coding-with-cl...
[1] https://github.com/slopus/happy
Plus I wanted a system that did not require the app and the computer running the AI agent to both be online at the same time. Having a third computer act as a dumb mailbox handles some corner cases I care about.
I've been trying to surreptitiously get claude code and an oven specific MCP server to run on my friend's smart oven for a prank. However this oven enters a low power state when you don't interact with it; killing the network connection. My vision is to queue up commands via the mobile app with fuzzy logic, and then have the oven make weird noises as determined by claude code at some later point when they go to make a pizza or something.
https://happy.engineering/docs/guides/self-hosting/
https://github.com/slopus/happy-server
There is a Dockerfile, plus a docker-compose.yaml, and a complete Kubernetes template as well.
There are already a plugins to use claude code in other IDEs.
This “Ill write a whole IDE because you get the best UX” seems like its a bit of a fallacy.
There are lots of ways you could do that.
A standalone application is just convenient for your business/startup/cross sell/whatever.
Lots of competing actors doing lots of similar things with confusing comparisons and quantifiable results.
Because I mentioned it and it's what I use daily: Roo is a VSCode extension. So you get the entire VSCode ecosystem for free. On the AI specific side, it has every feature this app highlights on its homepage and more. It works with just about any API provider and model you could ask for.
I could probably translate my existing workflow over to Claudia pretty easily, but what does that get me? A slightly different interface seems to be about it.
That's the question I keep hitting with these new tool announcements.
Continue.dev has some features, but it’s on VSCode and Jetbrains
That said, VSCode is a popular platform for this for exactly the reason I think consolidation is eventually inevitable: it's got a huge preexisting ecosystem. There are extensions for practically anything you could ask for.
There's likely room for some standalone, focused apps in this space. I just don't see the current wave of "we put a wrapper around Claude Code and gave it some basic MCP and custom prompt management tools like a dozen other applications this week" being sustainable.
They're all going to end up on their own tiny islands unless there's a reason for an ecosystem to develop around them.
A tiny island is fine for a tool like this - not everything needs an 'ecosystem'.
Typically, applications develop a userbase when they offer something that people can't find elsewhere.
What I'm saying isn't "everyone should be using VScode extensions for this"; it's "I see nothing to distinguish this from a bunch of other functionally identical applications and people just keep building them." I literally don't see a single unique feature promoted on the landing page.
My fundamental point is that we're in a gold rush phase where people are all building the same thing. We'll eventually see a handful of apps get popular and effort swell around those instead of everyone reimplementing the same thing. And my money is on that looking a lot like it usually does: the winners will be the apps that find some way to differentiate themselves.
you give up one side of freedom (the ide) for the other (the backend).
How many ways can you wrap (multiple agents, worktrees, file manager, diff viewer, accept reject loops, preset specifications for agents) -- let's try Electron! Let's try Tauri! Let's try a different TUI!
What if we sat down and really thought about how these agentic IDEs should feel first instead of copy pasting the ideas to get something out to acquire market and mind share? That's significantly harder, and more worthwhile.
That's how these agentic front ends should be advertised: "Claude Code, plus _our special feature_" and then one can immediately see if the software is filled or devoid of interesting ideas.
All the more reason to embrace a fully open source stack. We need to go hard on "lesser".
- Happy Claude Code Client: open source (MIT) effort for a quality mobile app
- Omnara: closed source mobile app, $9/month
- CodeRemote: closed source mobile app, $49/month
- Kisuke: closed source mobile app, private beta, unknown price
If you know of others, I would appreciate a PR to update the table I put together, or just let me know and I'll add it.
https://happy.engineering/docs/comparisons/alternatives/#qui...
There are more more desktop apps, probably because those are easier to design.
> I don't see what this offers me that I don't already have with Roo
Ironic >-< for an AI tool tied to a specific IDE
But long story short she showed me what she had on her iphone and it was a totally different app that wrapped a text chat interface around chatgpt, it wasn’t even themed like to be a persona or anything but was at the expense of any multimodal capabilities
Just caught me off guard about how common that might be
Seems pretty scammy to me, akin to typo squatting with potential to collect a lot more personal information but he can’t always be reasoned with.
Hopefully he heeds my advice to not provide anything personal.
It wasn't great.
- Installation using the provided binaries just fails on my machine - I have Ubuntu 22.04, which apparently has too old a version of glibc. Building from sourced worked though.
- Every time I want to open a new chat, it brings me back to the project list. I don't want to click on the same project every time!
- Scrolling is awful! It's slow, and it often doesn't automatically scroll down as the chat is generated so you have to do it yourself.
- There's no title or anything across sessions. If I'm now working on multiple things at the same time, I want to know what I'm working on quickly!
- The log/text entries take up so much space. Something like this would benefit from a much more compact view - it shouldn't use my entire screen to show me 1 TODO list and 1 tool use.
- Unlike the video, the code changes are all wrapped in a "AI Summary" entry which tells me what it did in a few words, with no option (that I could find) to open the code itself. Confused, couldn't find a setting for this.
- There's multiple UI bugs, and it's sluggish overall.
I didn't use the Agents stuff, which (given the video starts with it) might be the main focus? But as it stands, for my attempt at running multiple Claude Code sessions at once, this was too buggy to really work. Someone else mentioned https://conductor.build/, which might be more what I'm looking for, but unfortunately it lacks Linux support.
I hope it gets better! I could see myself using it after a few more releases, and I'm rooting for them - just sharing my experience here for others who are considering trying it.
I'm not as tied to the cli as other folks here, but even I found the Claude Code cli to be a better experience than this too.
I think it will improve, but for now I'm sticking with the cli.
CC development is not just development, not all types of development. it’s frontend JS based , and it’s backend development. Only those scenarios work.
Try creating native desktop or mobile app and it’s like a swamp of trial and error.
You have to learn by trial and error what documentation sets and instructions you have to provide at which moment and context and balance at with token cost.. it’s a multi dimensional problem for which there are no recipes that work.
On top of that your direct instructions to not use particular patterns or approaches gets forgotten and ignored y CC with later “you’re right, I should have…”. I am starting to think it’s not solvable by the user by providing docs, examples and instructions. That Claude must have native development baked in to the same level as they baked in the frontend and backend.
What I am getting to is - make a tool to manage those doc sets and contexts and instructions and allow to share those sets between users globally as recipes.
As others have said, this is a giant red flag.
I wonder if I'll have to rename at some point.
I am not saying it's infringement, I am just saying that my dumb brain made that connection and I feel like it's not unreasonable to assume that other people might as well.
For once reading the comments first has paid off!
Same reason you can't release a handheld console called the Gamegirl, or a voice assistant called Alexis.
Step 2: Turn around and sell security-as-a-service to the most profitable products
like a precursor to reddit's own API pricing changes that made it hard for 3rd party clients to compete.
The saving grace with these API wrappers is that local models being a thing can still let them hedge against the underlying AI labs eating up their stack.
Tweetdeck came out as the leader over the rest (mainly due to having actual functionality), and about a year after it was the clear victor (2011) twitter acquired them, and slowly integrated them into twitter properly (though they killed a bunch of features along the way intentionally).
Fast forward to the musk takeover, and twitter's API pricing changed such that making a third-party client is infeasible.
I think a lot of the same is likely to apply here.
It's a winner-takes-all market, there's a bunch of people iterating on form and ignoring function, and the winner will be based more on function than form.
If there's a clear winner on function, one of the AI companies can acquire and integrate it.
It already worries me that the Cursor agents occasionally try to perform operations with full absolute paths, which they wouldn't be able to know if they were properly sandboxed to the current directory.
At most, I've been thinking about installing one of the extensions to integrate Claude Code into (neo)vim, but even that I'm not sure I really want or need.
But for people who arm themselves to the teeth with GUIs and IDEs, I guess I can see the appeal.
What I want at the core is to be able to open up access to my laptop's currently running Claude Code instance (without all these hacky backdoors that fork the chat with every message by using `--print`; I want a first class API that lets me append messages to the current chat), then I want to be able to send messages (with voice transcription) and approve/deny permissions and see the code diffs and all of that.
Maybe something like a Telegram bot? I had hopes for Claude Code UI[1] but the web interface is too clunky on mobile.
1. https://github.com/siteboon/claudecodeui
https://vibetunnel.sh/
https://github.com/amantus-ai/vibetunnel
Many of my claude tasks get frequently get stuck over small stuff, or require input from me, so I had Claude whip up something comparable in a few minutes. Now I can keep them moving remotely with ease and not be stuck in front of a desktop monitoring them! It's dreamy.
My phone also can build and run many projects on its own so I often don't even connect to the laptop.
(Not to mention that if I only have my phone, I'm probably out doing something where I don't want to be working...)
https://omnara.com/
(Super rapid zooming in and out, flying all over screen at 3x speed, must cover eyes!!)
Made something? Dont start with a long, protracted "This is how i built it from step 1". Show the damn thing! Then tell me how you built which i will be interested in only if the product is good to begin with.
Extreme close-up: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YdxsWw_gV3E
I don't want to install a tool like this that isn't made by Anthropic.
I, too, find this confusing and actively dislike the naming and association here.
1. https://github.com/anthropics/devcontainer-features 2. shameless plug, my own open-source CLI for doing this: https://github.com/smithclay/claudetainer
I think it's another workflow, that might suit your needs, but I think the real magic continues to be in the model. Similarly, I'm sure Claudia adds some nice window dressing.
Eventually folks will settle in on some local maxima for interaction and software development with LLMs. Who know what it will look like? It'd be nice if whatever comes next bumps the industry out of the current scrum and sprint style workflows, if only to break folks out of the theatrics of these software personas and rituals.
Here's my WIP: https://github.com/astral-drama/filter
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44549802
There is an outstanding feature request around it at least:
https://github.com/getAsterisk/claudia/issues/8
What people do care about is where names imply some relationship that isn't true. In this case the name Claudia strongly implies that this is an official Claude-related product. They'll get a cease and desist soon enough if this actually becomes popular.
Thanks, OP!
I see a lot of commenters asking why a GUI is necessary. When you're running several agents in parallel it becomes very handy compared to the terminal. I can easily see the status of each which I haven't found a good equivalent for when using terminal tabs. Also it handles automatically creating git worktrees for each agent which is great.
You can tile terminals, you can use things like tmux to insert multiple command lines into one window, etc.
Question about Dashboard - I'm on subscription plan, and Dashboard shows - "Total Cost: $XX.YY". Is it somehow representitive towards how much credit I used in my plan, or it's just showing a costs it would take if I was using API instead?
Don't worry, someday you'll grow wiser and maybe you'll spend some time living as a CLI executable.
When I want to start an agent, I run a small command that takes in a prompt (and some optional flags but mostly the defaults are what I want). It does this: 1. Check out a worktree from a repo (defaults to my bread and butter repo with completions for the most active ~5 repos in my org) 2. Craft a command to launch an agent (supports codex, opencode, and gemini-cli because my company only gives us OpenAI keys). 3. Launch the command in a tmux session. 4. Exit 0.
There are some light integrations with Jira, GitHub, etc but they're accomplished by shelling out to other tools.
If I want to manage sessions, I've got tmux + fzf + other unixy tools old & new to manage them.
If I want to manage sessions remotely, there is vibetunnel. It would be cool to have a slicker AFK experience, but it works.
My silly little piece of vibe coded slop and duct tape, for my use case, is largely competitive with most of the offerings on the market, outside of the ones that do cloud-based environments. Some of these projects are VC funded teams of people working full time, I'm assuming. What a time to be alive.
I'm also amazed at how readily projects like this just embrace Claude Code lock-in. Is there really anything specific about it that other agent harnesses don't support? I haven't used it yet, but so far it just seems like it benefits in mindshare alone from being the default/first mover, not because it supports any particular feature the others do not. TBF I do hear that it is quite good.
Quality & polish is a compelling reason to _use_ something, but it's not a compelling reason to build walls IMO, especially in a space like this where context engineering techniques, prompts, etc are in no way secret sauce and can be readily copied.
Also saw this a couple months ago.
Yes, please :)
LLMs are that, but claude code is not.
I’d really love to know what specifically about this is beautiful.
Steve Jobs says it and for 20+ years every tech bro parrots it mindlessly. “Oh do I think I did a good job on this? It must be beautifully designed.”
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Magnet - The AI workspace for agentic coding
http://www.magnet.run
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You can think of Magnet as your workspace for collaborating with your human & AI agent team mates. We let you quickly spin up Claude Code sandboxes for every issue, and we're also thinking about how AI can be more of a thought partner in building high-quality software.
We're thinking about this problem space more broadly than just trying to be a GUI for Claude Code (though that's already a great starting point).
These are a few of the themes we think about:
- How can we use AI to help you think critically about the features you're prioritizing and what to build next?
- How can we always assemble and provide exactly the right context for every issue you're working on?
- What are the best patterns for collaborating with your human & AI teammates, to ship the highest quality code?
- How can you best specify exactly what you want, and verify that it's what you hoped for?
Would love for y'all to try it, and I'll post a video of me building a product with Magnet a little later here - the tool's getting really fun to use!
We're also very open to feedback and try to incorporate learnings quickly! I spent a large part of this weekend using Magnet to fix most of the issues someone we onboarded Friday brought up