Clawdi lets you run AI agents like OpenClaw and Hermes in cloud without setup, stop losing your agent setup every time you switch frameworks. The open-source environment that decouples your memory, API keys, and skills from the agent engine.
I’ve known the team for a few years. They’ve always been one of the scrappiest teams building in this space. When they told me they built Clawdi on top of OpenClaw, my first question was simple: What can it actually do?
I actually tried OpenClaw briefly when it came out because I heard a lot of AI savvy people had already been using agents to build their "team.” But I gave up after 30 minutes. Well, it was because I didn’t want to spend my time setting things up, not because it wasn’t powerful. Hermes is powerful too, but setup is still the hard part.
Clawdi is where it clicked for me. It took me about 2 minutes to get started, and now I use it for running parts of my Instagram workflow and a bunch of other things. Nothing fancy, just small things that save time every day.
And before anyone asks, yes, your data stays yours. API keys are encrypted and only accessible by you.
These days I’d go to Clawdi just to see what new agents or integrations they’ve shipped, and what else I can offload to my little lobster assistant.
Would love to see how others are using it and what workflows you try on Clawdi.
About Clawdi on Product Hunt
“Best home for all AI agents”
Clawdi launched on Product Hunt on April 25th, 2026 and earned 170 upvotes and 30 comments, placing #4 on the daily leaderboard. Clawdi lets you run AI agents like OpenClaw and Hermes in cloud without setup, stop losing your agent setup every time you switch frameworks. The open-source environment that decouples your memory, API keys, and skills from the agent engine.
On the analytics side, Clawdi competes within Chrome Extensions, Developer Tools and Artificial Intelligence — topics that collectively have 1M followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how Clawdi performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted Clawdi?
Clawdi was hunted by Justin Jincaid. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
I’ve known the team for a few years. They’ve always been one of the scrappiest teams building in this space. When they told me they built Clawdi on top of OpenClaw, my first question was simple: What can it actually do?
I actually tried OpenClaw briefly when it came out because I heard a lot of AI savvy people had already been using agents to build their "team.” But I gave up after 30 minutes. Well, it was because I didn’t want to spend my time setting things up, not because it wasn’t powerful. Hermes is powerful too, but setup is still the hard part.
Clawdi is where it clicked for me. It took me about 2 minutes to get started, and now I use it for running parts of my Instagram workflow and a bunch of other things. Nothing fancy, just small things that save time every day.
And before anyone asks, yes, your data stays yours. API keys are encrypted and only accessible by you.
These days I’d go to Clawdi just to see what new agents or integrations they’ve shipped, and what else I can offload to my little lobster assistant.
Would love to see how others are using it and what workflows you try on Clawdi.