Drizzle ORM
Drizzle's v1.0 release candidates land a JIT mapper rework, new codecs, and a breaking casing API
A side-by-side editorial comparison of Hotjar and Daytona — release velocity, themes, recent moves, and the top alternatives to consider.
Hotjar steadily widens its survey and user-research surface, but recent updates are thin on detail.
Hotjar's last three updates (auto-tag survey responses, custom survey button labels, invite respondents to interviews) all sit in the Surveys/Ask/Engage product line, suggesting research workflows are the active investment area. Source content is sparse — the recent entries scraped as just 'Copy link' titles — but the URL slugs and historical pattern paint a consistent picture.
Very high-cadence sandbox infra building the primitives agents need to run code
Daytona is shipping roughly every few days (v0.161 through v0.170 in this window), iterating fast on its code-execution sandbox platform. Recent releases add sandbox forking and snapshots, per-sandbox and per-region resource limits, runtime network controls, a BuildKit build path, and multi-language SDKs.
Hotjar's last three updates (auto-tag survey responses, custom survey button labels, invite respondents to interviews) all sit in the Surveys/Ask/Engage product line, suggesting research workflows are the active investment area. Source content is sparse — the recent entries scraped as just 'Copy link' titles — but the URL slugs and historical pattern paint a consistent picture.
Hotjar is broadening from session recording and heatmaps into a full qualitative research stack: surveys with AI-assisted tagging, user tests, prototype testing, and live interview recruitment. The arc points toward an end-to-end research platform inside one tool, competing more directly with UserTesting, Maze, and Dovetail than with pure analytics tools.
Expect the next releases to either expose AI-summarization of survey/interview data or a more integrated handoff between surveys and recordings — closing the loop between 'who said what' and 'what they actually did.' The scrape quality of recent updates also needs to improve before this changelog is genuinely informative.
Daytona is shipping roughly every few days (v0.161 through v0.170 in this window), iterating fast on its code-execution sandbox platform. Recent releases add sandbox forking and snapshots, per-sandbox and per-region resource limits, runtime network controls, a BuildKit build path, and multi-language SDKs.
The work clusters around making sandboxes a controllable, forkable primitive for AI agents: snapshot/fork to branch execution state, resource and network limits to contain it, and SDK simplification (moving execution to the daemon) to make it programmable. Daytona is building toward a fuller sandbox-orchestration layer.
Expect the forking/snapshot capability to graduate from experimental toward stable, with continued SDK and resource-control depth — the consistent themes across this release run.
Other Infra & APIs 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 Hotjar or Daytona.
Drizzle's v1.0 release candidates land a JIT mapper rework, new codecs, and a breaking casing API
Warp drops the terminal framing to bet on cloud software factories and agent orchestration
Unleash leans hard into AI-agent governance and self-hosting as its crawled feed fills with thought-leadership.
GitHub spends the week hardening enterprise governance and supply-chain security.
Resend keeps widening from a raw email API into agent-native tooling and audience management.
Rootly is wiring an AI agent and enterprise controls into the incident-response core.
See all Hotjar alternatives → · See all Daytona alternatives →
Latest ship moves from both products, interleaved chronologically. ⚡ = editorial spark.
They serve adjacent needs but don't currently overlap on shipped themes. Hotjar is currently shipping more aggressively (velocity 1.3 vs 0.0), with 0 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. Hotjar is currently shipping more aggressively (velocity 1.3 vs 0.0), with 0 editorial sparks in the last 30 days against 0. For your specific use case, the alternatives sections above list other Infra & APIs products to evaluate alongside.
Top Hotjar alternatives in Infra & APIs are ranked by recent ship velocity. Browse the "Hotjar alternatives" section above for the current picks, or visit /alternatives/hotjar for the full list with editorial commentary on each.
Top Daytona alternatives in Infra & APIs are ranked by recent ship velocity. Browse the "Daytona alternatives" section above for the current picks, or visit /alternatives/daytona for the full list with editorial commentary on each.