MotherDuck vs Hex
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
MotherDuck climbs from serverless DuckDB warehouse to an agent-operable data platform
MotherDuck ships a dense, real release stream on two fronts: tracking DuckDB core (1.5.x, DuckLake, concurrent checkpoints) and building an agent-and-embed layer on top (Dives data apps, an MCP server, the MCP Dive Viewer now in ChatGPT and Claude Cowork). The latest notes add server-side Iceberg interop and a new pipelines product, Flights.
The product is moving up the stack from query engine toward a full data platform: pipelines (Flights), interactive apps (Dives, now GA), open-table-format interop (Iceberg, DuckLake), and broad connectivity via the Postgres endpoint (Looker, Retool, Drizzle, dbt Cloud, DBeaver). MCP-native access recurs throughout, treating AI agents as first-class users of the warehouse.
Expect Flights and Iceberg attach to graduate from Preview to GA, more Postgres-endpoint BI and tool integrations, and continued MCP/agent surface. This is grounded in the visible pattern of previews maturing and steady Postgres-endpoint and MCP investment.
Hex is remaking its notebook into an agent that both uses and plugs into MCP
Hex is converting its analytics notebook into an AI agent platform. It now runs as an MCP client, is invocable from Codex, and ships generative data apps built from prompts, while keeping its model roster current with Kimi K2.7 and Fable 5 and giving admins default-model and branding controls. Integration and governance work — a Figma connector, AWS IAM-role support, signed embedding — rounds out the core.
The arc points at Hex as connective agent infrastructure: consuming external context and tools via MCP, distributing itself into other agent surfaces like Codex, and letting analysts assemble apps and dashboards from prompts. Expect the agent, rather than the notebook grid, to become the primary interface, with model choice and governance layered on top.
Likely next steps deepen the agent's tool-use over MCP connections and push generative apps further toward production embedding and governance controls.
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