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Surprised it wasn't on the homepage yet, my X / LinkedIn feed is non stop about it.

I would love to hear from someone who actually played with all the FOMO harnesses / frameworks and actually did a first impression comparison on what to try out (I'm sure it's not even apples to apples) or discovered that it's all marginally better at best from just rolling your own via Claude Code / Codex / Cursor...

- paperclip

- hermes

- pi

- opencode

- openclaw

- nanoclaw

- gastown

- other FOMO framework I missed (not including skill frameworks such as gbrain etc)

What happened to the Mila Jovovich mind palace thing?
Are “AI agents” the next “frameworks” in the AI age?
Why do these AI agents keep using Telegram as their channel for user communication?

Telegram is literally a spying platform run by the FSB?

I’m not sure, but I integrated Claude with Slack (with my own app; not the default Claude app). It’s a game changer. Claude is literally like a co-worker now. When I ask it for work, it creates a dedicated Slack channel that runs that session Id. I can resume from Cli or import cli sessions into slack.
This submission's reference URL is not affiliated with Nous Research
I use Hermes at home. Swapped out Openclaw for this. It seems to work better with smaller contexts, chuncking it up in smaller pieces.

I don't code with it, I use Claude for that. But what I do do: it's a sysadmin for my homelab. It has a read-only mcp server to check the k8s status and has it's own ssh access to fix stuff after I approve it per session.

It's magical. Each morning I get a small update whether the backup ran, if pods are stuck or behaving weirdly etc... Since the entire homelab is GitOps I can always reverse a change made by the agent.

I am now adding Nextcloud and moving calendar offline, from Google to my own hw. I barely touch it anymore, manually. In stead I sent a quick voice note on Telegram and 30 sec later I get a screenshot 'proving' it worked.