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Comparison · DevOps

Tigris vs WeWeb

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

T
Tigris
DEVOPS
5.0

Tigris is positioning object storage as the substrate for AI agents

◆ Current state

Tigris is building S3-compatible object storage with a distinct thesis: buckets as forkable, snapshot-able substrate for AI agents. Concrete releases in this window are solid storage primitives — soft delete with 90-day recovery, a streaming tar bundle API to pull thousands of objects in one request, prefix-filtered lifecycle rules, and a CLI migrate command. But much of the feed is engineering-blog material (agent sandboxes, forking LangGraph state, a git server stored in a bucket) that argues the thesis rather than shipping a feature.

◆ Where it's heading

The direction is clear and consistent: make storage the durable home for agents that otherwise live in disposable sandboxes — copy-on-write bucket forks, agent shells, provider-agnostic SDKs with snapshots and forks built in. The product releases keep S3 parity table-stakes (soft delete, lifecycle, migration) while the narrative work stakes out the agent-substrate position. Worth noting that the changelog leans heavily on blog posts, so raw entry cadence overstates shipping velocity.

◆ Prediction

Expect more agent-oriented primitives around forking and snapshotting to graduate from blog demos into shipped API surface; the entries point that way but don't pin a specific next release.

W
WeWeb
DEVOPS
6.3

WeWeb is going AI-native, letting external tools build in your project

◆ Current state

WeWeb is pushing its visual web builder toward AI-native development. It shipped MCP support so external AI tools can understand and build directly in a WeWeb project, then followed with in-app WeWeb AI gaining planning and task tracking plus MCP quality-of-life fixes. Underneath, the core keeps getting refined — a redesigned Supabase Select, formula columns in table views, and steady editor, navigation, and publishing polish.

◆ Where it's heading

The arc is toward a builder where AI is a first-class way to construct apps, whether through the in-app assistant or an external tool driving the project over MCP. Recent releases pair that agentic surface with data-layer depth (Supabase, formula columns) and deployment ergonomics, suggesting WeWeb wants AI-assisted building to sit on top of a solid, data-connected foundation rather than replace it. The messaging around 'AI, visual, or both' signals a deliberately hybrid workflow.

◆ Prediction

Expect WeWeb AI and MCP to keep maturing together — richer planning, more reliable agent edits — alongside continued Supabase and data-source depth, given how these two threads dominate the recent cadence.

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