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by mike_hearn
63 days ago
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This is interesting. I haven't used OpenClaw but I set up my own autonomous agent using Codex + ChatGPT Plus + systemd + normal UNIX email and user account infrastructure. And it's been working great! I'm very happy with it. It's been doing all kinds of tasks for me, effectively as an employee of my company. I haven't seen any issues with memory so far. Using one long rolling context window, a diary and a markdown wiki folder seems sufficient to have it do stuff well. It's early days still and I might still encounter issues as I demand more, but I might just create a second or third bot and treat them as 'specialists' as I would with employees. |
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- I suspect that in this moment, cobbling together your own simple version of a “claw-alike” is far more likely to be productive than a “real” claw. These are still pretty complex systems! And if you don’t have good mental models of what they’re doing under the hood and why, they’re very likely to fail in surprising, infuriating, or downright dangerous ways.
For example, I have implemented my own “sleep” context compaction process and while I’m certain there are objectively better implementations of it than mine… My one is legible to me and therefore I can predict with some accuracy how my productivity tamagotchi will behave day-to-day in a way that I could not if I wasn’t involved in creating it.
(Nb I expect this is a temporary state of affairs while the quality gap between homemade and “professional” just isn’t that big)
- I do use mine as a personal assistant, and I think there is a lot of potential value in this category for people like me with ADD-style brains. For whatever reason, explaining in some detail how a task should be done is often much easier for me than just doing the task (even if, objectively, there’s equal or higher effort required for the former). It therefore doesn’t do anything I _couldn’t_ do myself. But it does do stuff I _wouldn’t_ do on my own.