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tao_oat | 1 day ago
- OpenClaw: the big one, but extremely messy codebase and deployment
- NanoClaw: simple, main selling point is that agents spawn their own containers. Personally I don't see why that's preferable to just running the whole thing in a container for single-user purposes
- IronClaw: focused on security (tools run in a WASM sandbox, some defenses against prompt injection but idk if they're any good)
- PicoClaw: targets low-end machines/Raspberry Pis
- ZeroClaw: Claw But In Rust
- NanoBot: ~4k lines of Python, easy to understand and modify. This is the one I landed on and have been using Claude to tweak as needed for myself
jeremyjh|1 day ago
The only secure way to use any of these tools is to give them very limited access - if they need a credit card give them a virtual card with a low limit, or even its own bank account. They can send email but only from their own account; like a human personal assistant. But of course this requires careful thought and adds friction to every new task, so people won’t be doing it.
barbazoo|1 day ago
I'm using the signal-cli-rest-api but the whole setup feels kinda wonky.
theturtletalks|1 day ago
tao_oat|1 day ago
Nanobot's was not great (cron + a HEARTBEAT.md meant two ways to do things, which would confuse the AI). But because the implementation is so simple, I could improve it in a few minutes in my own fork!