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Comparison · Support

Spiceworks vs Plain

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

S
Spiceworks
SUPPORT
5.0

An IT-media brand whose feed is journalism, not a product changelog

◆ Current state

This feed is Spiceworks' editorial output: IT career columns, security reporting, and infrastructure trend pieces. There is no product-release signal here at all. Recent entries cover DevOps and SRE hiring trends, a CISA GitHub leak interview, phishing-resistant identity, AI PCs versus cloud, and detecting fake remote IT workers.

◆ Where it's heading

As a media property, Spiceworks' arc is topical rather than shipped: it tracks what IT professionals are worried about right now, currently identity security, AI governance, and data-center scale. The cadence is steady daily publishing, which inflates any activity metric without reflecting product motion.

◆ Prediction

Expect continued daily IT news and career content; there is no product roadmap to predict from this feed, only the next round of editorial topics.

P
Plain
SUPPORT
7.5

Plain turns Sidekick from a drafting assistant into an agent that acts

◆ Current state

Plain is a customer-support platform building an agentic layer — 'Sidekick' — into the core thread workflow. Recent releases moved Sidekick from suggesting to acting: it can take actions across connected tools, start working proactively the moment a thread matches a workflow, and it now answers in Slack. The surrounding plumbing (scheduled workflows, thread fields via the chat widget, machine-user API links to Linear) is all in service of more automation.

◆ Where it's heading

The arc points to autonomous, workflow-driven support: AI that investigates, summarizes, drafts, and executes before a human opens the thread. Each release widens either Sidekick's reach (Slack, connected tools) or the triggers that set it off (workflow conditions, schedules), steadily shifting the human role from doing the work to reviewing it.

◆ Prediction

Expect deeper Sidekick autonomy — more action types and likely approval or guardrail controls — plus more workflow triggers that launch automation without a human in the loop.

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