Akiflow vs Sunsama
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Akiflow lays an AI co-pilot layer over its task/calendar core — Meeting Assistant, smart scheduling, recurring-event reliability.
Akiflow's release stream is dominated by two themes: extending Aki Meeting Assistant (auto-recording, transcripts, AI summaries, action items) with a free-trial GTM push, and grinding through recurring-event correctness across desktop and mobile. AI-powered task creation now schedules tasks against priorities and available calendar slots, knitting Aki into the planning surface itself, not just the meeting follow-up.
Akiflow is building an end-to-end AI productivity loop: meetings captured by Aki → action items extracted → tasks auto-scheduled against the user's calendar. The recurring-event reliability work — three releases running — suggests the underlying calendar engine is being hardened to support that loop at scale. Differentiation strategy is shifting from 'best command-bar planner' toward 'AI assistant that actually owns your day.'
Expect Meeting Assistant to graduate from free-trial limits into a paid add-on tier, and Aki's smart scheduling to gain feedback loops (auto-reschedule, focus-time protection). Mobile parity will likely keep absorbing engineering effort.
Sunsama ships Task Priority + Auto-Sort and starts wiring Sunny into MCP — daily planning gets opinionated.
Sunsama is in steady weekly-release cadence, with the bulk of recent work concentrated in two places: the Task Priority + Auto-Sort system, which has just graduated from beta into a documented core feature, and the Sunny AI assistant, which is gaining persistent memory and MCP-callable primitives like get_task_by_id. The integration surface continues to deepen — Linear, Todoist, Jira, Asana imports now carry priority signal through into Sunsama's own model.
The product is moving from 'manual daily planner' toward 'opinionated planner that can be driven by Sunny or external agents.' Auto-Sort is the most telling move: Sunsama is now willing to reorder the user's day on its own based on priority and scheduled time, which is a philosophical step away from the manual drag-and-drop heritage. The MCP work signals they want Sunsama to be addressable by other AI tools — not just consumed via the Sunny UI.
Expect the next few weekly drops to expand Sunny's MCP toolset (write actions, not just reads) and to roll priority rollover into more of the integration importers. A 'Sunny plans your day' end-to-end flow that leans on the new priority + auto-sort plumbing is the natural next milestone.
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