I tried Google’s Antigravity for a week, and this limitation made me close it for good
I really liked Google’s Antigravity when it was announced last year. The reason was it had a generous rate limit and was quite functional, being based on the Electron project, which is the same foundation as VS Code. You could get quite a lot done using even the Pro models in Antigravity, but now, when I went back to Gemini last week, things were very different. The rate limits are abysmal now. The platform is not even usable if you are not a Pro member. The free tier is basically a trial that does not even last half an hour if you try to do any serious work. I should not be complaining about not getting enough rate limit for free, but when you look at something like Codex, which has more than generous rate limits across both the Codex app and the VS Code extension, you start to question why you shouldn’t close Antigravity for good.
I really liked Google’s Antigravity when it was announced last year. The reason was it had a generous rate limit and was quite functional, being based on the Electron project, which is the same foundation as VS Code. You could get quite a lot done using even the Pro models in Antigravity, but now, when I went back to Gemini last week, things were very different. The rate limits are abysmal now. The platform is not even usable if you are not a Pro member. The free tier is basically a trial that does not even last half an hour if you try to do any serious work. I should not be complaining about not getting enough rate limit for free, but when you look at something like Codex, which has more than generous rate limits across both the Codex app and the VS Code extension, you start to question why you shouldn’t close Antigravity for good.
Michael Johnson
Chicago
Chicago
Published by: aplhsindia.in
