NanoClaw Moved from Apple Containers to Docker

(twitter.com)

78 points | by simplesort 3 hours ago

12 comments

  • botusaurus 3 hours ago

    > 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

    • daemonologist 1 hour ago

      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.

      • Tt6000 3 hours ago

        How is this "becoming enterprise"? If anything it now defaults to millions of Linux users being able to access it

        • Someone 1 hour ago

          Could also make the other part ‘smaller’ and use nail, hoof or dewclaw (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dewclaw)

          • andai 3 hours ago
            • arcanemachiner 3 hours ago

              Well, there was Picoclaw, but I think it was renamed to Clawlet.

              • imiric 1 hour ago

                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.

                • guld 1 hour ago

                  Well actually there is ROE.md, no code, just a Markdown file to generate a claw.

                  • wolpoli 1 hour ago

                    The code is always generated using the latest LLM, ensuring that it takes advantage of the latest architectures and programming language features.

              • Rapzid 39 minutes ago

                MicroClaw.. No fear of it becoming corporate LOL.

              • stavros 3 hours ago

                For my version of the AI assistant, I used a Docker container and Unix permissions:

                https://github.com/skorokithakis/stavrobot

                All plugins run in one Docker container, but they're isolated from each other by different *nix users, so they can't read each other's files. That's much more lightweight, and you don't have to run one container per plugin.

                Crucially, plugins can't read each other's secrets or modify each other's code. I even have a plugin configuration webpage that doesn't go through an LLM, so the LLM never sees your secrets if you don't want to.

                • amelius 3 hours ago

                  Putting these NanoClowns inside a container will not protect you from all kinds of safety hazards.

                  • andai 3 hours ago

                    That's the fun part! You spend all day hardening it... run it in docker in a vm on a separate machine. And then you hook it up to your gmail and give it unrestricted internet access :)

                    • arcanemachiner 3 hours ago

                      Wearing a seatbelt will not protect you from all kinds of car accidents.

                      • amelius 3 hours ago

                        Yes. That's why you don't put a Clown behind the steering wheel.

                        • weinzierl 2 hours ago

                          It is more like getting in the car with Stuntman Mike. The risk is not that the driver might make a mistake but that it actively turns against you and a container is not a security boundary against an adversary.

                          • bdcravens 2 hours ago

                            Tesla Robotaxi says hold my beer

                          • InsideOutSanta 2 hours ago

                            Wearing a helmet will not protect you from all injuries caused by jumping off a cliff.

                            Point is, don't jump off a cliff.

                            • troupo 2 hours ago

                              The nature of these tools is that you tell them not to jump off a cliff, so they ride the bicycle over it. Or a car. Or "you're completely right. I assumed it was possible to fly". Or...

                              • refsys 1 hour ago

                                or you pass by graffiti telling it to jump off a cliff, written in iambic pentameter (or whatever is the jailbreak meta of the month)

                        • einarfd 49 minutes ago

                          I’ve been building sandboxing for Claude code workloads. So I can let it run wild without breaking my computer. Originally I used docker, but I’m now in the process of jettisoning that, and switching to qemu.

                          For my use case I want ssh access and being able to use docker in docker. This allows for things like test containers and docker compose. You can get all of that working with docker. But you kind of have to fight docker the whole way.

                          NanoClaw might have different needs, and docker could work better for it, and I hope so for their sake. But I’m not optimistic.

                          • arsalanb 1 hour ago

                            I'm surprised that the developer experience around sandboxing on macOS is generally so bad. Seatbelt is in limbo and apple containers are just a pain to work with as some have highlighted in this thread

                            • Xx_crazy420_xX 2 hours ago

                              I can't believe the solution is creating uncompatibile branch and forcing users to use cladue for resolving merge conflits. Why not bake in the dual compatibility?

                              • jimmydoe 1 hour ago

                                you may slot in podman, but apple container is not very good atm.

                              • sergiotapia 48 minutes ago

                                I installed nanoclaw last night funny to see it here on HN.

                                It was easy to install it, and get it running. I could @Andy message it on whatsapp but after that it fell apart fast.

                                I asked it to login to Facebook and check my notifications, and it started saving credentials and random things in the repo as json files. And din't work. It was hard to even figure out what was happening and why it didn't work.

                                Then I tried messaging it again and it didn't respond to me.

                                These things are extremely brittle despite the enourmous amount of github stars. I think it's just normies starring things trying to get on the train unfortunately. The promise of an AI Jarvis is unrealized still.

                                • brcmthrowaway 3 hours ago

                                  Can someone explain the special sauce of the claws compared to just use claude.ai etc

                                  • lm28469 1 hour ago

                                    There is no special sauce, it's mass hysteria driven by fake adoption metrics and people who don't know anything about computers who let "agents" run free on theirs. It's the equivalent of showing a magician cut a women in a box in half to a 5 years old kid... Put them in the same category as the neckbeards getting a hard on every 3 weeks for the past 2 years when they get to see the new version of ThE PeLiCaN On A BiCyCle... I wonder how long the circus will keep on going, at least it's funny to witness from the outside

                                    • stavros 3 hours ago

                                      They're "always" running, so they can notify you out of the blue, without you having to initiate a conversation. It's really nice UX to get a message from my assistant saying "hey, it's time to leave for the gym, and don't forget the supermarket bag because you're picking up milk on the way back, as you've run out".

                                      • mpweiher 1 hour ago

                                        Dunno, my calendar reminds me "out of the blue", without me having to initiate a conversation, that it's time to leave for the gym, no "claw" or "ai" involved.

                                        I always have my backpack with me, so if I need milk I can pick it up on the way back. And I am pretty sure that I have to notice if I need milk myself.

                                        The tech sounds cool, but whenever I hear about actual applications, I don't see the point.

                                        • stavros 38 minutes ago

                                          If you don't have a need for a personal assistant, that's fine, not everyone does. That doesn't mean nobody does.

                                          The milk thing was just an example of a tool that can intelligently combine things for you, not a literal "it's a calendar with a milk function".

                                          This is a bit like "if I want to call my friends, I have a phone a home, why would I need a mobile?" which somewhat betrays a lack of imagination.

                                          • olyjohn 21 minutes ago

                                            You're just not providing any good examples of what I cant already do with current automation tools.

                                          • dgellow 43 minutes ago

                                            Everything I’ve seen about it feels so over engineered

                                          • netsharc 2 hours ago

                                            Hmm, Google Gemini has access to my Google Tasks and can set reminders. It's also asked me if I want it to check something at "tomorrow 9am", and when I said yes, it managed to do that.

                                            • stavros 2 hours ago

                                              Yeah, that's kind of like it. Agents just have many many more integrations, so they can do many more things. For example, it knows all my preferences, and can search for flights and say things like "this one is more expensive, but skipping the morning wakeup is worth the $20".

                                              • caminante 2 hours ago

                                                But have you had consistently good experience with Google Gemini and Google apps? Or read the mixed reviews?

                                                For me, Gemini has been hit or miss and somehow less useful than Assistant was 2+ years ago.

                                                • netsharc 1 hour ago

                                                  The coding assistant for VSCode is nuts (i.e. gets it wrong a lot, also one time it just got so confused).

                                                  I have Gemini Pro for free for a year because I bought a Pixel phone, it answers very fast, so I like it. Let's see how I'll feel about shelling out real money when the subscription ends. But on the phone, I still use Assistant (and just have a shortcut to launch the webpage in my browser), because the phone was forcing Gemini, but after 5 minutes of usage I found it was slower for my usages (usually I just tell it to set an alarm and add a reminder/calendar event), and when I asked about my tasks, Gemini would get the task listing from Google Tasks, and keep it in its history... that'll pollute my chat history!

                                              • dimitri-vs 3 hours ago

                                                How would it know you've ran out of milk?

                                                • stavros 2 hours ago

                                                  I told it when I noticed. I made a little pendant with a mic I can speak into and it goes to the bot.

                                                  • LeafItAlone 2 hours ago

                                                    I would love to hear more about this!

                                                    • stavros 2 hours ago

                                                      I haven't written it up yet but the repo is here:

                                                      It's just a MEMS mic, a battery, and an ESP32, very simple but it works amazingly well. I wrote a companion Android app for it and it works extremely reliably!

                                                      • liminal-dev 1 hour ago

                                                        Are you running NanoClaw or a different project?

                                                    • imiric 1 hour ago

                                                      Turns out Humane was ahead of its time.

                                                  • brcmthrowaway 2 hours ago

                                                    How do people afford this?

                                                    • andoando 2 hours ago

                                                      Claude max $100 is way more usage than I need. And yeah its not running all the time, just has a heartbeat file telling it how to check something and run

                                                      • stavros 2 hours ago

                                                        A subscription, really. It doesn't actually run all the time, it just has a cron job that makes it feel that way.

                                                    • gas9S9zw3P9c 1 hour ago

                                                      It can schedule stuff and run in a loop, so it's like claude combined with cron. Truly amazing technology.

                                                      • sailfast 1 hour ago

                                                        Crons. A local daemon. System access as a user with the ability to listen to changes. Some idea of shared “memory” between sessions. Provider agnostic about AI. Multi-model.

                                                        • dimitri-vs 3 hours ago

                                                          It's for people that don't know how or don't want to be bothered with setting up a messenger integration and a scheduler.

                                                          • saberience 2 hours ago

                                                            There is no special sauce. They are claude or codex in a loop. The loop is facilitated by basic cron jobs. That's it.

                                                            Ai Agent as it has been for months, plus skills, plus a cron job to prompt it to do things every 20 minutes or 2 hours or however often you want.

                                                            • boywitharupee 2 hours ago

                                                              they have a watchdog loop, it runs periodically

                                                            • ericbuildsio 2 hours ago

                                                              Sensible, this broadens our hosting options.

                                                              • gre 1 hour ago

                                                                apple container is really buggy with networking

                                                                • Y-bar 1 hour ago

                                                                  That’s not the fault of containers, I have significant Bluetooth and WiFi issues on my apple devices without running any containers.

                                                                • benatkin 3 hours ago

                                                                  So they're making it use OCI images? Cool. Hopefully there will be good support for Podman.

                                                                • john_alan 2 hours ago

                                                                  Use containerd , Docker is cancer.