Dust vs WorkOS
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Dust doubles down on MCP-native agents with multi-model routing and enterprise guardrails.
Dust is building an MCP-native agent platform with broad model coverage and growing enterprise depth. The May cadence shows parallel investment in agent capability (vision via MCP tools, context compaction, frame editing/export) and operational readiness (audit logs, SIEM streaming, protocol migrations). Mobile is getting a voice-first input redesign.
The product is converging on agents-in-the-enterprise via MCP, with multi-model routing as table stakes. MCP V2 migrations and image returns from MCP tools point to the protocol becoming Dust's integration backbone. The model-refresh cadence — three vendors in 48 hours — suggests model routing is now a core competency, not a feature.
Expect more MCP V2 connector migrations and richer MCP return types beyond images. The voice-first mobile input bar likely precedes a deeper voice-mode agent surface.
WorkOS ships three new surfaces in a week, pushing into front-end widgets and agent-run admin.
WorkOS is an enterprise identity and auth infrastructure provider, best known for AuthKit, SSO, directory sync, and audit logs. The changelog shows an unusually dense shipping burst: three distinct new product surfaces in a single week, the Widgets API, a Management MCP server, and an API Gateway, layered on top of steady AuthKit feature work like step-up authentication, waitlists, and an Astro integration.
Two directions are visible. First, AuthKit is growing from a backend auth library into a fuller front-end toolkit, adding client widgets, framework SDKs, and richer session flows. Second, the platform is becoming programmable by agents and unified at the edge, via the MCP server and the API Gateway. WorkOS is moving up the stack from backend primitives toward client UI and agent-driven administration.
Expect more AuthKit framework integrations and additional agent-facing tooling built on the MCP server, plus broadening coverage for the newer Widgets API and API Gateway. The pace suggests WorkOS is racing to own both the front-end auth UI layer and the agent-administration layer at once.
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