Architecture Decisions in OpenClaw: Lessons Learned
Architecture Decisions in OpenClaw: Lessons Learned Have you ever spent hours debugging a piece of software only to realize the […]
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Architecture Decisions in OpenClaw: Lessons Learned Have you ever spent hours debugging a piece of software only to realize the […]
Hey there, AI builders! Kai Nakamura here, back on clawdev.net. Today, I want to talk about something that’s been on my mind a lot lately, especially as the pace of AI development just keeps accelerating. It’s about contributing, but not in the way you might immediately think. We often hear about “contributing to open source”
Hey everyone, Kai Nakamura here from clawdev.net, your usual spot for all things AI development. Today, I want to talk about something that’s been on my mind a lot lately, something that many of us interact with daily, but perhaps don’t give enough thought to when it comes to our own contributions: the often-overlooked art
Most guides about building multi-tenant setups in OpenClaw are wrong. Seriously, you might end up pulling your hair out following some of them. When I first tried deploying a multi-tenant environment, I got stuck for hours trying to juggle configurations like a circus clown. Imagine this: you’re knee-deep in YAML files, and suddenly your whole
Hey everyone, Kai Nakamura here from clawdev.net, and today I want to talk about something that’s been buzzing in my Slack channels and GitHub feeds for weeks: the quiet revolution happening in open-source AI development. Not the big, splashy foundation model releases, but the nitty-gritty, the tools, the infrastructure, the stuff that makes building with
Hey everyone, Kai Nakamura here from clawdev.net! It’s been a minute since I dove deep into the nitty-gritty of what makes our AI dev world tick, and today, I’ve got something that’s been on my mind for a while. We talk a lot about building models, training data, and optimizing algorithms, but what about the
Hey everyone, Kai Nakamura here, back on clawdev.net! It’s March 20, 2026, and the AI dev world is, as always, buzzing. I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how we, as individual developers and smaller teams, can really make a dent in this fast-moving space. We’re not Google or OpenAI, right? We don’t have infinite
Hey everyone, Kai Nakamura here from clawdev.net. You know, I spend a lot of my time poking around the edges of what’s new in AI development, and lately, one thing keeps popping up in my conversations and my own struggles: getting your open-source AI project noticed. It’s not enough to build something cool anymore; the
A practical guide to contributing to open source AI projects, with real examples, code snippets, and actionable tips for developers.
Prompt Engineering Best Practices 2025: Your Actionable Guide
The field of large language models (LLMs) is moving fast. What worked yesterday might be less effective tomorrow. As an open-source contributor focused on practical applications, I’ve seen firsthand the evolution of prompt engineering. This guide outlines the “prompt engineering best practices 2025” that will help you