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Because I have translated this big shot a few times, X will push it out.
Consistent, fast, and high-quality comments, not AI's random analysis.
Translation:
Anthropic's progress in developing products like OpenClaw has already surpassed that of OpenAI.
OpenClaw proves something that the entire AI industry has been envisioning: the truly ideal AI Agent should not only exist in the cloud but should run directly on your personal computer; at the same time, you should be able to remotely access it no matter where you are.
It has garnered 318,000 stars on GitHub, and then Steinberger joined OpenAI, preparing to commercialize and scale this idea.
However, since then, the results delivered by OpenAI have not been complete. Codex is just a desktop programming agent, lacking mobile remote control capabilities; the ChatGPT Agent runs on OpenAI's cloud-based virtual machine, and you can't see the local files on your computer at all.
Now, developers have publicly requested features in Codex's GitHub repository, hoping to achieve "mobile control of desktop agents." Meanwhile, third-party developers have already taken the initiative, creating Taskdex and Remote Codetrol, using relay servers and Tailscale tunnels to fill this gap.
Anthropic has directly addressed this area natively.
Their Dispatch allows your phone to pair with Claude Desktop, enabling you to assign tasks to Cowork no matter where you are, and when you return, the work is already done.
In fact, Cowork already possesses a complete set of key capabilities: running virtual machines locally, accessing the full file system, controlling browsers, coordinating multiple sub-agents, and managing skill systems with Markdown. The significance of Dispatch is that it completes the final link, turning the entire system into a personal AI work platform that can be "put in your pocket and scheduled at any time."
This is also why it can do things that cloud agents cannot: Cowork directly interacts with your real computer environment—your files, your browser, and the tools you are already logged into and connected to are all there.
For example, if I ask it to cross-reference local spreadsheets with pricing on competitor websites, it can complete it immediately because both the spreadsheet and the browser are on the same machine.
With a cloud agent, you often have to upload files first, losing the original file paths and context, and it still cannot access your already connected Slack or Google Drive on your local machine.
The key here is not just "can it run," but whether the "context is real and complete," and local machines inherently possess this authenticity.
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