Lime Connect vs KIMISUITE
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Lime fuses its AI agents and workflow builder into one conversational automation layer
Lime (Connect AI) ships on a biweekly cadence, bundling updates across three pillars: Connect AI agents, a Workflow builder, and messaging channels (notably WhatsApp). The current state is a maturing conversational-automation platform where the AI agent and the workflow engine increasingly act as one system, with steady knowledge-base, SSO/SCIM, and template-management hardening around them.
The clear arc is convergence: AI agents that can trigger and hand off to workflows, become URL- and context-aware, stream responses, and pull from a more capable knowledge base. Enterprise plumbing (SSO per role, SCIM beta) is being added underneath. The product is moving from 'chatbot plus separate automations' toward a single agent-driven workflow surface.
Expect deeper agent-workflow handoffs, more dynamic/variable-driven routing, and continued enterprise-readiness work (SCIM, SSO) as the two pillars keep merging.
KIMISUITE's feed is a values manifesto series — thoughtful, but not a product changelog
The recent KIMISUITE feed is a run of short opinion/positioning posts about how the company builds software — predictability, transparent pricing, responsible AI, data ownership on cancellation, minimal data-processor chains, and building in-house rather than assembling third parties. These are trust-and-philosophy essays, not release notes. The one actual product update in the wider history (June's Meeting Hub and Gastro POS Hub apps plus a redesigned App Store) sits just outside the recent-six window.
KIMISUITE is positioning as the deliberately un-trendy, self-hosted-values business suite: durable engineering, public pricing, in-house-built modules, and tight data custody as the pitch. That messaging cadence suggests a sales-and-trust push aimed at buyers wary of SaaS lock-in and data sprawl, but the blog-heavy feed makes product velocity hard to read directly.
Given June's App Store and per-app subscription work, the likely next product move is more standalone apps in the KIMISUITE workspace under that per-app model; the crawl source should be repointed to the product-update feed rather than the opinion blog to confirm.
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