Stream vs Windmill
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Stream's logistics platform ships steady monthly digests: planning, orders, mobile, no pivots.
This feed is Stream, a delivery and transport-management platform (not the chat/video devtool of a similar name), publishing dated monthly release digests. Each month bundles dozens of scoped improvements across Planning, Orders, Vehicles, the driver mobile app, Public API, and reporting, plus a long fixes list. The cadence is reliable and the work is broad but incremental.
The arc is operational maturity, not repositioning: automatic run costing, an Operations Monitor, a rebuilt Clients screen, expanded Public API endpoints and webhooks, and continual planning/mobile refinement. It reads as a maturing vertical SaaS deepening its existing surface for logistics operators rather than opening new categories.
Expect the same monthly digest cadence with continued Public API and integration expansion and further planning/mobile polish; no directional shift is visible in these entries.
Windmill is quietly turning its orchestrator into a DuckLake-native data platform.
Windmill remains a script-and-workflow orchestrator, but its recent output has narrowed almost entirely to the data layer: DuckLake materialization, partitioned assets, freshness, and now schema contracts. The changelog reads less like a general automation tool and more like a managed lakehouse being assembled on top of the existing job engine, with most of the heavier machinery gated to Enterprise Edition.
The direction is a governed, self-maintaining data platform: fork-scoped data environments for isolated iteration, freshness SLAs with an auto-healing watchdog, scheduled compaction and retention, range backfills, and save-time schema validation between producers and consumers. Each release hardens a different operational corner of the DuckLake stack rather than adding breadth, so Windmill is deepening into data-ops rather than widening its surface.
Schema contracts shipped as non-blocking warnings, so the next likely move is to tighten that loop — enforceable contracts or richer lineage on the DuckLake graph. Continued Enterprise gating of the data-ops features (maintenance, freshness watchdog, range backfill) also points to a productized data-platform tier.
See more alternatives to Stream →
See more alternatives to Windmill →