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Vlad's avatar

We wanted to write a critique of Google, but ended up with an article about panic at Kilo Code.

Strictly speaking, the fact that Google didn't write anything from scratch, but rather adopted a well-established brand like Windsurf, isn't a negative, but a positive. Also, the fact that Google has already spent $2 billion on foraying into the coding agent market indicates that it definitely won't abandon this idea and will actively promote Antigravity.

The main issue here is that Google controls pricing not only for Gemini, but also, as we've already seen, for Sonnet, since it operates from Google's Vertex servers, and Google, under its contract with Dario, can even set the price for Sonnet itself.

If Google were to sharply discount the price of Gemini 3 and Sonnet exclusively for Antigravity, then let's be honest. Hard times are ahead for Cursor and Kilo Code. I hope Gemini 3 will be available in Free Tier via the Kilo Code CLI, if not, I'll have to migrate to Antigravity.

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Juan Villa's avatar

I generally like Kilo's posts/articles, but this one is rough. This is just complaining about a theory of a commercial fork which is itself a flawed assessment as this is more akin to a rebrand (as another person pointed out). There's literally no mention here of the performance of the product. There's no actual problem pointed out here other than the fact that (apparently) forking proprietary products is bad and deserves a sassy term like PORK. What was the point of this article?

The TLDR I'm taking away here is "Antigravity is a fork of Windsurf. Forks are bad when they are commercial forks, but good when they are open-source forks. Also, Kilo is a plugin so you can chose your IDE, therefor it's better than Antigravity".

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