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A topic discussed in the group over the weekend, which is also the most talked about online,
"Is OpenClaw really useful for ordinary people?"
Many people online say it’s not useful, citing that it doesn’t actually do things better than many current solutions and is quite expensive. It feels a bit redundant, and compared to existing AI tools, it doesn’t significantly improve efficiency.
I personally agree with this point, but now doesn’t mean in the future.
This reminds me of when computers were first invented (why use computers as an example? Because it’s also a groundbreaking product). Before the internet, word processing software (like Word), spreadsheets, or games appeared, ordinary people had no idea what they could do with a computer.
Moreover, operating it was difficult (no mouse), and it wasn’t cheap.
Even as it evolved, many older generations and even middle-aged people still couldn’t use them, gradually becoming out of touch with the times.
In the early explosion of AI, the text generation products available to the public included ChatGPT 3.5, image generation with Midjourney, and video generation with Sora. Looking at these now, they seem terrible; for example, the content produced by GPT is clumsy/no memory/all nonsense; Midjourney requires you to play on Discord; and the videos produced by Sora are very short and cannot handle hands, text, occlusions, etc.
From another perspective,
AI models back then were teaching you how to use prompts, learning the "AI language," which questions could be handled by AI and which needed human input. You could buy memberships to access certain features, and as the models continuously improved, today’s GPT has reached version 5.2, and SuperGrok/Gemini 3 have shown astonishing capabilities. Seedance 2’s video capabilities and GPT-4o have also evolved to a point where they can produce content that is indistinguishable from reality.
When you think AI is already useful, starting to learn from scratch will waste a lot of time. The current "lobster" is the same, so I think it’s unnecessary to get hung up on what today’s lobster can do for you or how much money it can make.
Instead, it’s about learning step by step until a more powerful "lobster" appears, and then just keeping up.

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