What's great
First, I love a node-based canvas because it allows me to experiment and have everything in one place. I also like how user-friendly it is to use, the UI design is very satisfying to work with. It also helps me showcase the process to other people who may not know much about AI workflows as they see how things are connected and work together. I appreciate not having to pay for multiple subscriptions and pay-per-use, I think this also brings a sense of consciousness about how we use generative tools and the resources needed to run them. Lastly, I think this is a tool both for people just entering the space of creative AI as well as more experienced creators. I value the community and how we can share workflows among each other and remix our canvases, this is very important for the communal experimentation and innovation of the creative space and what can be achieved.
vs Alternatives
All of their features is what I’ve been waiting for in the AI creative space. I wanted a canvas and not having to juggle around different tabs and generations at the same time. Having everything in one place was vital to my creative process and helping things flow more smoothly. It also helped having it be user-friendly, I was able to take a look at their docs, sample workflows and get started right away.
How smooth is the unified canvas for cross‑modal workflows?
Very smooth, you can run multiple models and nodes at the same time. Of course once the canvas gets too convoluted and big it slows down navigation but as long as it’s organized, it runs very well.
Are there ready‑made templates for my use cases?
Yes, there are templates by the Fuser team as well as workflows made by other creators. Their platform encourages the users to share our workflows for others to remix and use via "copy project” so they don’t alter the workflow you’re using.
Does the canvas support real‑time previews and comparisons?
The canvas allows you to input the same prompts to different models to compare. You can also take the outputs out of the model and onto the canvas to keep them as you keep generating other iterations.
