This is a submission for the OpenClaw Writing Challenge
The PC came from my daughter. She was getting a new one ... this was going in the trash. 16GB of RAM, a GPU as valuable as a potato, and the best part? It sounds like a rocket ship whenever I open Chrome. I'd been a Mac guy forever. The thought of using a Windows machine made my skin crawl. But the PC was free, so I took it. Within the hours of setting it up, I downloaded OpenClaw. Within the first fifteen minutes I saw the black screen of death. Not blue ... black. I'd heard of the blue screen. Apparently the new thing is black. Maybe I was right all this time.
Everyone said get a Mac Mini. You for sure want the local model for privacy. So I looked. The M4 Pro starts at $1,399 with 24GB unified memory ... enough to run models. My friends bought them, created LLCs, wrote off the hardware as CapEx. Good for them.
I wasn't ready to drop fourteen hundred bucks.
The thing is ... I'm not against spending money on tools. I'm against spending my money.
The $40 Discovery
I was determined to find another solution. AWS is my bread and butter. It's my go-to. When I need cloud infrastructure, I don't think about Azure or Google Cloud. I think about AWS.
I went that route first. Asked other people using OpenClaw what specs I'd need, then looked up AWS pricing based on those specs. Came back with the price .. and wanted to throw up.
So ... I did what we all do. Asked ChatGPT. Asked Claude. Both acted like they never heard of OpenClaw. It must be their distant cousin they pretend not to know.
So I went to Google. Typed "OpenClaw Cloud Hosting." Found a YouTube Video by Hostinger. They made it look easy. I didn't believe it would work based on the specs ... but at the end of the day I was like, tag on Ollama cloud and ... "I can try it for $40."
Spun up a KVM 1 instance with 1 vCPU and 4GB RAM, and stumbled into something that's now running 24/7 on my phone, my laptop, my Slack. The Mac Mini I was supposed to buy sits at $1,399 in my browser history, unwatched.
I guarantee a $20 VPS is not as good as a Mac Mini. The models are obviously not running locally ... but it works for me.
The System, Not the Tool
What I have isn't just "OpenClaw on a VPS." That's the headline. The reality is more interesting.
OpenClaw is running on that $20 VPS 24/7. It's integrated into my daily workflows through Slack and Telegram. I can message it from anywhere ... laptop, phone, doesn't matter. It has access to my content pipeline skills: research, drafting, editing, story management.
The assistant doesn't write for me. It removes the friction between having a thought and getting it down.
The gap between "I have an idea" and "that idea is captured" has always been the hard part. Not the thinking. Not the editing. The transfer from brain to document.
The gap between "I have an idea" and "that idea is captured" has always been the hard part. Not the thinking. Not the editing. The transfer from brain to document.
OpenClaw bridges that gap. I'm still the strategist. I'm still the editor. I'm still the one with the voice. But I don't get stuck on blank pages anymore.
The Authenticity Question
Here's what I see happening with AI and content: people are using it to make up shit. They're generating posts about experiences they haven't had, advice they haven't tested, frameworks they haven't built. The AI writes it, they publish it, and it sounds ... off.
I get why they do it. The content treadmill is brutal. Daily posting is unsustainable without help. But there's a difference between AI-assisted and AI-generated.
My hundred-story library contains real things that happened to me. OpenClaw helps me structure them, find connections, get unstuck. But the source material is mine. The judgment about what to publish is mine. The voice that lands or doesn't land is mine.
That's the part people miss when they outsource the whole thing. AI can amplify what you have. It can't create what you don't.
What I Actually Built
For the curious, here's the stack:
- Hostinger KVM 1 VPS ($20/month): 1 vCPU, 4GB RAM, 50GB NVMe, 4TB bandwidth, Ubuntu 22.04
- Ollama Pro ($20/month)
- OpenClaw: Running 24/7 on the VPS
- Slack + Telegram integration: Interface from any device
- Custom skills: Story library, research assistance, drafting support, LinkedIn optimization
- Ollama: Running models on the VPS for specific tasks
The VPS runs quietly. I SSH in whenever I need to. The rest of the time, OpenClaw is just ... there. An endpoint I can hit from anywhere. A consistent presence that knows my patterns.
It's not fancy. It's reliable. It's been running for months without me touching it.
It's not fancy. It's reliable. It's been running for months without me touching it.
What OpenClaw Gets Right
I've tried a lot of AI tools. What OpenClaw gets right that others don't:
It's not trying to be a chatbot
It's trying to be an assistant ... something with memory, with skills, with integration into your actual life. The skill system means you can teach it what you need, not just prompt it differently.
It lives where you want
Local if you want. VPS if you want. The abstraction is portable. You're not locked into someone else's infrastructure.
It's built for builders
The people who made OpenClaw seem to understand that the value isn't in the model ... it's in the system around the model. The orchestration. The memory. The integration.
What This Means For You
If you're reading this and thinking about personal AI, ask yourself what you're optimizing for.
Privacy? A VPS on a reputable host is private enough for most workflows. Your threat model may differ.
Speed? Local wins on latency, but only if your hardware is good. My daughter's old PC with Intel graphics was slower than the VPS.
Cost? $40/month vs $1,400 upfront is math you can do.
Control? OpenClaw gives you plenty. It's open. You own your data. You're not locked into anyone's ecosystem.
The point isn't that my setup is better. The point is that "local AI" became a default answer before people asked what problem they were actually solving.
The Real Win
I was already writing daily. I'd been using Claude for that. But I'm on the Pro plan, and I was running into my weekly limit with the number of things I was asking it to do.
With OpenClaw and Ollama, I've never hit my rolling window. The assistant is always there. I can message it without counting tokens or watching a progress bar. It removes the friction between having something to say and getting it said.
My story library has 100+ entries. I add to it weekly. The assistant helps me find patterns, structure arguments, and get unstuck. But the stories are mine. The voice is mine. The judgment about what goes out is mine.
That's the system. Not the Mac Mini. Not the VPS. The system of having source material, a process, and an assistant that removes friction instead of adding it.
You don't need $1,400 to get started. You need a clear sense of what you're trying to solve ... and the willingness to build around your constraints instead of someone else's recommendation.
The Mac Mini I was supposed to buy sits at $1,399 in my browser history, unwatched. I don't need it. OpenClaw on a $20 VPS + Ollama pro at $20 is the right abstraction for my wiring.
If you're building something similar with OpenClaw, I'm curious about your setup. Drop a comment or find me on LinkedIn. I'm always interested in how people solve the same problem with different constraints.
Top comments (3)
hey brother i get u completely, i am on a dell intel i7 of 2017, and i am running claude code on my laptop. forget about having more than 4 chrome tabs and more than 1 claude code tab on vs code, before i used to run as well docker with n8n in and the thing was boiling, now using a hetzner server and i am full of containers and orchestrations over there, so i do chill on managing the whole setup with claude on my laptop
Nice. What's actually running on the Hetzner box? Containers plural says there's a stack.
n8n, wordpress, express of node js, and a qdrant vdb.