• Practically AI
  • Posts
  • 🧠 OpenClaw Goes Everywhere: OpenAI, Kimi, and a $10 Clone

🧠 OpenClaw Goes Everywhere: OpenAI, Kimi, and a $10 Clone

Today in AI: OpenAI brings OpenClaw in-house, Kimi ships it to the browser, and someone rebuilt it to run on a Raspberry Pi

👋 Hello hello,

If you’ve been reading anything about AI this week, you’ve probably seen one name over and over again: OpenClaw.

It’s quickly becoming the foundation for a new wave of AI agents. The kind that can run tasks, connect tools, and work in the background while you focus on more important things. And suddenly, everyone from OpenAI to hobbyist engineers wants a piece of it.

This makes one thing clear. OpenClaw is no longer niche. It’s going mainstream. Let’s dig in.

🔥🔥🔥 Three Curated AI Stories

OpenAI just made a major move by bringing OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger onboard. He’ll be working on building the next generation of personal AI agents inside OpenAI’s products.

The bigger story here is what OpenAI said about the future. They expect agents to work together, communicate, and handle useful tasks for people. That gives us a glimpse of where AI products are heading next.

This interview clip of Peter with Y Combinator gives you an idea of how AI agents will repalce 80% of the apps you’re using right now:

Interestingly, OpenClaw itself will remain open source and live inside a foundation that OpenAI will continue supporting. That signals something important. OpenAI wants to build on top of open ecosystems, not lock everything down.

Almost immediately after the OpenAI news, Moonshot AI shipped its own version called Kimi Claw.

This puts OpenClaw directly inside your browser. No setup, no local installs. Just open a tab and start using agents. It also includes access to thousands of community skills, cloud storage for files, and live search integration. You can even connect your own custom OpenClaw setup and link it to tools like Telegram.

This removes one of the biggest barriers to using agents. You don’t need to be technical anymore. You just open a webpage and start.

Engineers rebuilt OpenClaw in Go, making it dramatically more efficient. The result is an alternative that runs on a $10 Raspberry Pi, rather than expensive hardware. It uses less than 10MB of memory, starts almost instantly, and remains fully open source.

This matters because it lowers the barrier to entry even further. When powerful agent systems can run on ultra-cheap hardware, adoption can scale much faster.

🔥🔥 Two Tools Worth Trying

Google just released CodeWiki, and it turns any GitHub repository into an interactive guide. You paste your repo, and it generates explanations, architecture diagrams, walkthroughs, and even a chatbot that understands the code. This makes exploring unfamiliar codebases much easier.

If you’re a developer, student, or working with open source projects, this can save hours of manual reading.

Google also launched a free AI language learning tool called Little Language Lessons.

It creates custom conversation partners, visual vocabulary cards, and slang lessons tailored to you. It supports over 40 languages and even helps improve pronunciation.

I tried it for myself and it was a fun learning experience:

This is great if you want something more flexible than traditional apps.

Try it here.

🔥🔥 One Trending AI Mega Prompt

OpenClaw is one of the most powerful agent frameworks right now. It allows AI to run tasks, automate workflows, and interact with tools on your behalf.

The problem is setup used to be complicated. But now, there are simple ways anyone can try it.

But first, here’s the video you should watch to know what to do:

Instagram Post

Here are three ways you can deploy your own OpenClaw agent:

1. Use Manus

Go to Manus and open their Agents feature, then connect it to Telegram to create your own AI agent in under a minute.

2. Use Kimi Claw

Visit kimi.com and deploy an OpenClaw agent on their cloud. This requires upgrading your plan, but removes all technical setup.

3. Use Emergent

Go to Emergent, select Multipod, and run a prompt to launch your agent. You can use their cloud or connect your own model APIs.

Did this issue help you discover something useful?

Login or Subscribe to participate in polls.

💬 Quick poll: Are you planning to try OpenClaw yourself?

Until next time,
Kushank @DigitalSamaritan

Reply

or to participate.