| Feature | Zo | Poe |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Cloud computer with AI built in that chats, executes code, deploys services, and connects to your apps | Multi-model AI chat platform by Quora |
| What happens after the AI responds | The AI can execute commands, write files, deploy services, send emails, and update your tools | You read the response. That's it. |
| Persistence | Persistent Linux server with filesystem, packages, and running services | Chat history only — no workspace or files |
| Hosting | Full hosting on zo.space (sites, APIs, background services) | |
| Scheduled tasks | Agents on any schedule: monitoring, reports, data syncs | |
| Channels | SMS, email, Telegram, web chat | Web, iOS, Android |
| App integrations | Gmail, Calendar, Linear, Drive, Notion, and more | |
| Models | Claude, GPT, Gemini, open-source, or bring your own API key | GPT-4o, Claude, Gemini, Llama, and dozens more |
| Custom bots | Yes — full Linux environment with code execution and tool access | Yes — prompt-based, no code execution |
| Free tier | ||
| Paid plans | From $18/mo | $19.99/mo |
What Is Poe?
Poe is Quora's multi-model AI chat platform. One subscription, many models: GPT-4o, Claude, Gemini, Llama, Mistral, and others. You can switch models mid-conversation, compare outputs side by side, and browse a marketplace of community-created bots with pre-configured prompts for specific tasks.
The value proposition is access and variety. Instead of paying for separate subscriptions to OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google, you pay once and get all of them in one interface. Poe handles the routing and billing. The mobile apps are clean, the switching is fast, and for casual to moderate AI usage it is a good deal.
Where Poe stops is at the boundary of chat. You type, a model responds, you read the response. There is no code execution, no file storage, no app integrations, no scheduled tasks, no hosting. Poe is a window into many AI models. You can look through it, but you cannot reach through it and touch anything on the other side.
What Makes Zo Different
Poe gives you access to multiple AI models. So does Zo. The difference is what happens after the model responds.
On Poe, you get text. Useful text: summaries, drafts, code snippets, creative writing. But it stays in the chat window. You copy it, paste it somewhere, and do the next step yourself. If the AI writes you a perfect email draft, you still have to open Gmail, paste it in, and click send.
On Zo, the AI acts on its output. Ask it to draft an email and it sends the email through Gmail. Ask it to build a landing page and it deploys it to zo.space. Ask it to track your Linear velocity weekly and a scheduled agent pulls the data every Monday, compiles the report, and drops it in your Notion.
Zo runs on a persistent Linux server. Files stick around. Services stay deployed. Agents run on schedule. You reach it through SMS, email, Telegram, or the web. Poe is a chat interface with many models behind it. Zo is a computer with many models inside it, plus the ability to do something with what they produce.
Key Differences
Chat Window vs. Computing Environment
Poe routes your messages to different AI models. You type, a model responds, the interaction ends. There is no filesystem, no running processes, no tool execution. The chat history persists, but nothing else does. You cannot ask Poe to save a file, run a script, or check on something later.
Zo has a filesystem, a shell, a web server, and connections to your apps. Chat is one way to interact with it, but behind that interface is a full computing environment that takes action in the real world. Ask it to process a CSV, and it writes a script, runs it, and gives you the output file.
Multi-Model Access vs. Multi-Model + Execution
Both let you pick from multiple AI models. The distinction is what comes next. On Poe, you get a response. On Zo, the AI can execute commands, deploy services, send messages through your apps, and update your project boards. The models are the brain; the computer is the body. Without that body, even the best model output requires you to do the manual work of carrying it forward.
Consumer Chat vs. Personal Infrastructure
Poe is a consumer product: polished, simple, and designed for people who want easy access to top AI models. It does that well. The onboarding is instant, and the interface stays out of your way.
Zo is personal infrastructure. Your own server, your own files, your own AI that connects to your own tools. It is built for people who want AI that does things, not just AI that talks. The tradeoff is a slightly higher learning curve in exchange for dramatically more capability.
Isolated Conversations vs. Accumulated State
Poe conversations are self-contained. Each chat is its own thing. There is no shared workspace, no persistent state, no cross-session context. A useful answer from last week's chat is just a scroll away, but it has no connection to what you ask today.
Zo builds on itself. Files you create stay. Services you deploy keep running. Context from last week's conversation informs this week's work. The environment gets more useful the longer you use it.
Where Poe Wins
Widest model selection in one place
GPT-4o, Claude Sonnet, Gemini Pro, Llama 4, Mistral, and dozens more. Poe is the easiest way to access the most models through a single interface, and switching between them mid-conversation is seamless. For users who want to compare how different models handle the same prompt, this breadth is unmatched.
Community bot marketplace
Thousands of user-created bots with specialized prompts. Browse by category, try one, fork it, make it yours. For exploring what different prompt configurations can do, the marketplace is a playground. Some bots are genuinely creative, and the ability to remix them lowers the barrier to building custom AI experiences.
Clean mobile experience
Native iOS and Android apps with fast, minimal chat interfaces. For quick model access on the go, Poe's mobile experience is polished. The apps load quickly, conversations sync across devices, and the model switching is smooth even on slower connections.
Lowest possible learning curve
No setup. No configuration. No terminal. Open Poe, pick a model, start typing. It is the most frictionless way to try frontier AI models. If you have never used an AI assistant before, Poe is a good place to start.
Where Zo Wins
Turns AI responses into real-world action
Zo does not just generate a draft email; it sends it. Does not just suggest calendar changes; it makes them. Does not just write code; it runs it, deploys it, and keeps it live. The gap between "here's some helpful text" and "it's done" is the gap between Poe and Zo. For anyone who has ever copied a ChatGPT response into another app and thought "why can't the AI just do this part too," Zo is the answer.
Runs in the background without you
Scheduled agents operate around the clock. A morning email digest. A weekly Linear velocity report. A nightly backup of a Google Drive folder. Poe only works when you are actively chatting. Close the tab, and nothing happens until you come back.
Connects to the tools where your work actually happens
Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Linear, Notion. Poe has no app integrations at all. It is a standalone chat window disconnected from the rest of your workflow. Zo bridges that gap by reading from and writing to the tools you already use.
Hosts what you create
Websites, APIs, and services deploy to zo.space and stay running. Poe cannot host a single file. If you want to turn an AI-generated idea into something live on the internet, Zo handles it end to end.
Full code execution environment
Write and run code in any language. Install packages. Process data. Run databases. Poe's custom bots are prompt-wrapped text generators with no code execution, no shell access, no real computing. Zo gives you a Linux server where the AI can actually build and run software.
Choose Poe if you want:
- Want the easiest way to access many AI models in one place
- Enjoy exploring community-created bots and comparing model outputs
- Need a clean, simple mobile chat experience
- Don't need AI to take actions, manage tools, or run in the background
Choose Zo if you want:
- Want AI that executes, deploys, and manages — not just responds
- Need scheduled agents running autonomously in the background
- Work across Gmail, Calendar, Linear, Notion, and want one AI connecting them
- Want to host websites, APIs, or services without a separate provider
- Need real code execution and a persistent computing environment
Use both if you:
- Want Poe for quick model comparisons and casual chat, and Zo for the work that requires action: deploying, automating, and connecting your tools
Zo
Basic plan
- Free tier available
- Cloud computer with hosting, agents, and integrations
- Multi-channel access (SMS, email, Telegram, web)
- Custom pricing for teams and enterprise
Zo's subscription includes a cloud computer, hosting, agents, app integrations, and multi-channel access. The free tier gets you started with no credit card.
Poe
Poe subscription
- Free tier (limited daily messages)
- Multi-model chat access
- Custom bots and bot marketplace
- Web, iOS, and Android apps
Poe's subscription gives you chat access to multiple models and the bot marketplace. No hosting, no integrations, no agents, no computing environment.
Is Zo a Poe alternative?
Can Zo access multiple AI models like Poe?
Does Poe have scheduled agents?
Can Poe connect to my apps?
Can Poe host websites or run code?
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