Sourcegraph
Sourcegraph turns code search into the substrate for agents that migrate whole repo fleets.
A side-by-side editorial comparison of Recall and ONNX Runtime — release velocity, themes, recent moves, and the top alternatives to consider.
After Recall 2.0, the second-brain iterates fast on sources, voice, and control
Since April's Recall 2.0 relaunch — agentic chat, an API and MCP, and the Max tier — the product has been in rapid iteration. It has widened what it can ingest (Instagram, LinkedIn, Apple News, text/Markdown), added Listen Mode voice playback, and now Custom Personas that pin how the AI behaves. The consistent thesis is knowledge-first AI: your saved sources come before the open web.
ONNX Runtime is prying execution providers out of its core into independent plugins.
ONNX Runtime is a mature, high-cadence inference runtime shipping steady point releases with heavy security hardening. The clearest architectural throughline right now is the Execution Provider Plugin API: backends that were once compiled into the core binary are being pulled out into independently versioned, dynamically loaded plugins. WebGPU just became the first EP to ship that way, following the CUDA Plugin EP groundwork.
Since April's Recall 2.0 relaunch — agentic chat, an API and MCP, and the Max tier — the product has been in rapid iteration. It has widened what it can ingest (Instagram, LinkedIn, Apple News, text/Markdown), added Listen Mode voice playback, and now Custom Personas that pin how the AI behaves. The consistent thesis is knowledge-first AI: your saved sources come before the open web.
Recall is layering reach and control onto its chat: more sources in, more ways to steer the AI (personas, multi-step actions), and more model choice (Opus 4.8, GPT-5.5). Release notes point toward public profiles, sharing, and a write API as the next expansion beyond personal capture.
Based on the roadmap notes threaded through these releases, expect public Recall profiles and shared collections, plus a write/bulk-ingest API, to be the next headline moves.
ONNX Runtime is a mature, high-cadence inference runtime shipping steady point releases with heavy security hardening. The clearest architectural throughline right now is the Execution Provider Plugin API: backends that were once compiled into the core binary are being pulled out into independently versioned, dynamically loaded plugins. WebGPU just became the first EP to ship that way, following the CUDA Plugin EP groundwork.
Two arcs dominate. First, EP decomposition — expect more accelerator backends to ship as standalone, separately-versioned plugins so hardware vendors iterate on their own cadence. Second, LLM inference on the edge: WebGPU is being built into a first-class transformer backend (Gemma4, Qwen3-style QKV/MLP fusions, FlashAttention), alongside microscaling FP8 quantization and quantized KV caches on CPU and CUDA.
The 1.27.0 notes point to ORT 1.28 targeting ONNX 1.22; expect it to continue the plugin-EP build-out and WebGPU LLM optimization, with more quantization (2-bit/FP8) paths across CPU and GPU.
Other ai-assistants products tracked by Sparkpulse, ranked by recent ship velocity. Each card links to a full editorial trajectory and lets you pivot into a head-to-head comparison with either Recall or ONNX Runtime.
Sourcegraph turns code search into the substrate for agents that migrate whole repo fleets.
The Anthropic TypeScript SDK is racing to expose a wave of new agent-oriented API primitives
OpenHands Cloud is in enterprise-hardening mode, shipping org, budget and observability plumbing daily
LangGraph 1.2.x is in stabilization mode, hardening the delta-channel checkpoint path
Qodo bets code review beats code generation — and wires GPT-5.6 behind full-codebase enforcement
DataRobot recasts itself around agent governance — identity, MCP control, and shadow-agent discovery
See all Recall alternatives → · See all ONNX Runtime alternatives →
Latest ship moves from both products, interleaved chronologically. ⚡ = editorial spark.
They serve adjacent needs but don't currently overlap on shipped themes. Recall is currently shipping more aggressively (velocity 6.3 vs 2.5), with 1 editorial sparks in the last 30 days against 0. See the at-a-glance table above for a side-by-side breakdown of velocity, recent sparks, and editorial themes.
Sparkpulse doesn't pick a winner — we score release velocity, not feature parity. Recall is currently shipping more aggressively (velocity 6.3 vs 2.5), with 1 editorial sparks in the last 30 days against 0. For your specific use case, the alternatives sections above list other ai-assistants products to evaluate alongside.
Top Recall alternatives in ai-assistants are ranked by recent ship velocity. Browse the "Recall alternatives" section above for the current picks, or visit /alternatives/getrecall for the full list with editorial commentary on each.
Top ONNX Runtime alternatives in ai-assistants are ranked by recent ship velocity. Browse the "ONNX Runtime alternatives" section above for the current picks, or visit /alternatives/onnx-runtime for the full list with editorial commentary on each.