Semantic Kernel vs Together AI
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Semantic Kernel READMEs now name a successor — Microsoft Agent Framework is the next stop.
Semantic Kernel's most recent Python release (1.42.0) added an explicit 'Microsoft Agent Framework successor callout' to the READMEs — Microsoft is publicly pointing users toward a different framework as the forward path. The rest of the recent cadence is consistent with a project in late-stage maintenance: security hardening (path validation in CloudDrivePlugin, gRPC plugin, OpenAPI plugin; SQL escaping in connectors; Snappier and Kiota vulnerability bumps), dependency bumps via dependabot, vector-store connector polish, and small prompt-template fixes. Feature additions are narrow — ImageContent in tool/function results, OpenAI text-to-image model support, prompt template serialization improvements.
The project is transitioning from active framework to maintained predecessor. Microsoft's agent stack is consolidating under the new Microsoft Agent Framework banner, and Semantic Kernel is shifting into security-and-deps mode — the kind of release pattern you see when a team is keeping production users safe while migration paths are being built elsewhere. Read in parallel with the eight-month silence at AutoGen, the picture is clear: Microsoft is collapsing three previous agent-framework efforts (SK, AutoGen, Semantic Workbench) toward one supported runtime.
Expect SK to stay on a security-and-deps cadence for at least another two quarters, with a hard deprecation timeline likely announced once Microsoft Agent Framework has feature parity. Anyone building net-new on Semantic Kernel today should plan a migration; existing deployments are safe for the moment but on borrowed roadmap time.
Together AI is pricing itself as the open-stack alternative to frontier coding-agent APIs.
Together is hammering on two things: (a) inference economics, with a benchmark claiming 76% lower cost than Claude Opus 4.6 on coding-agent workloads, and (b) breadth of model surface, evidenced by day-0 Nemotron 3 Nano Omni, DeepSeek-V4 Pro at 512K context, and Goose-driven 'deploy any HuggingFace model' tooling. Side outputs — a voice finder, the Violin video-translation tool, and a Pearl Research Labs crypto-inference partnership — broaden the developer surface without changing the core narrative.
Together is positioning to be the default API for teams running coding agents on open models, with explicit price/perf comparisons against closed labs. The pattern of day-0 launches plus dedicated container offerings makes the strategy clear: any open frontier model should be one click away on Together. Crypto-adjacent and partnership work (Pearl, Adaption) reads as experimentation rather than core roadmap.
Expect more cost-comparison content against named frontier APIs and a tighter coding-agent SKU (likely a benchmark-grounded preset for Cursor/Aider-style workloads). Day-0 launch cadence will continue as the differentiator versus AWS Bedrock and other neoclouds.
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