OpenHands vs DataRobot
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
OpenHands Cloud ships a fast release train of org, auth, and agent-plumbing work.
This is a real changelog: the OpenHands Cloud line is shipping near-daily point releases (1.39 through 1.43) heavy on enterprise and org plumbing — SMTP email, super-admin and user-provisioning endpoints, org conversation admin, default-org auto-add — plus agent-facing work like semantic file chunking via tree-sitter and an agent-pause interrupt UI. Titles are version-only, so the substance sits in the release bodies.
OpenHands is hardening its cloud offering for multi-tenant, enterprise deployment: roles and permissions, provisioning, monitoring, and workspace lifecycle are the through-line. The agent-capability work (AST-based chunking, pause/interrupt control) advances alongside, but the current emphasis is org and admin readiness rather than headline agent features.
Expect continued enterprise-admin and org-management releases at the same cadence; a directional signal would be a new agent capability rather than another provisioning or permissions endpoint.
DataRobot bends its whole blog toward governing agents in production
DataRobot's feed is a thought-leadership blog, and this run is almost entirely about the operational problem of agents in production: agent identity, shadow-agent discovery, and governing MCP connections at scale. Two entries are concrete product moves, adopting the Agentic Resource Discovery spec and shipping a Google Antigravity CLI plugin; the rest are essays framing the governance problem DataRobot wants to own.
DataRobot is repositioning from model lifecycle to agent lifecycle, and specifically toward the control-plane layer of identity, discovery, and governance for autonomous agents. The concrete releases point at making DataRobot both discoverable to external agent clients and embeddable in developer agent workflows.
Expect more agent-governance product surface, likely tooling to inventory and control the shadow agents and MCP connections the essays keep describing. The blog is laying demand groundwork for those features.
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