> But NanoClaw isn't just my personal project anymore. Thousands of people are using it. People are running production workloads on it. Businesses are building on it. There's a real community now.
as OpenClaw and now NanoClaw became "enterprise", now we need a new FemtoClaw to pick up the indie/boutique place
How is this "becoming enterprise"? If anything it now defaults to millions of Linux users being able to access it
I'm sure whatever LLM FemtoClaw calls out to will also write a blurb about its growing adoption in production enterprise applications. This sentiment is probably very well represented in the training data.
How's 100 lines? :)
https://github.com/a-n-d-a-i/ULTRON/blob/main/src/index.ts
Could also make the other part ‘smaller’ and use nail, hoof or dewclaw (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dewclaw)
Well, there was Picoclaw, but I think it was renamed to Clawlet.
That's old news. Now there's Plancklaw, renamed to ∅. It has no code base, no bugs, no security issues, infinitely scalable, and all the features of every other *claw.
Well actually there is ROE.md, no code, just a Markdown file to generate a claw.
The code is always generated using the latest LLM, ensuring that it takes advantage of the latest architectures and programming language features.
We need to go the other direction. GigaClaw eats $100,000/month in tokens and requires a Threadripper with 256GB of RAM on a gigabit connection just to handle the orchestration.
MicroClaw.. No fear of it becoming corporate LOL.