Fair question. Those three are hosting services for stock OpenClaw — you sign up, they spin up an instance, you get a Telegram bot. That's it.
We built something different.
Every agent gets a real Chromium browser running on a virtual display. You can watch it work through a VNC viewer right in the dashboard. None of those services have this — they're text-in/text-out.
Each workspace runs up to 10 agents, each with its own browser and filesystem. Agents can spawn sub-agents to break up complex tasks. Every workspace is an isolated Docker container with dropped capabilities and security policies, not a shared Node process.
Those services give you a chatbot you talk to on Telegram. We give you an agent with a browser, a shell, a scheduler, and the ability to actually do things on the internet — and you can watch it do them.
There are countless of these services out there
What do you think makes this any differences from ones like
clawforall.app simpleclaw.com clawi.ai
just to name 3
it seems OpenClaw wrappers are the trend right now just like chatgpt wrappers were
Fair question. Those three are hosting services for stock OpenClaw — you sign up, they spin up an instance, you get a Telegram bot. That's it.
We built something different.
Every agent gets a real Chromium browser running on a virtual display. You can watch it work through a VNC viewer right in the dashboard. None of those services have this — they're text-in/text-out.
Each workspace runs up to 10 agents, each with its own browser and filesystem. Agents can spawn sub-agents to break up complex tasks. Every workspace is an isolated Docker container with dropped capabilities and security policies, not a shared Node process.
Those services give you a chatbot you talk to on Telegram. We give you an agent with a browser, a shell, a scheduler, and the ability to actually do things on the internet — and you can watch it do them.
More on what's under the hood: https://claw42.com/features
Docs if you want to dig in: https://claw42.com/docs