record_id: 310f8b3e-f83d-81e2-846c-cad3c1e431d2 created_time: 2026-02-23T23:44:00.000Z title: 02-23 Briefing: Autonomous AI Governance, Local Installation, and Family Logistics source_url: / [TRANSCRIPTION] Speaker 1 00:00:55 Yes, yes, I'm coming. Speaker 2 00:03:05 The Connection. The connection? Yeah. Yeah, okay, okay. Might not have that one. Set up for a. Speaker 3 00:03:12 Oh yeah, no, I thought there's. Oh! I better put it on. Yeah, yeah thank you. Thank you. Speaker 3 00:04:07 Hey Siri, Speaker 4 00:04:07 Call Ashley. Speaker 4 00:04:46 Hi, you've reached Ashianna Cleish. Please leave your name and a message, and I'll get back to you as soon as I can. Thank you. Goodbye. Speaker 4 00:06:59 Corey liked your message. Speaker 1 00:11:47 Yes. Speaker 2 00:14:07 Ex actly what's going on each day and updating it with our active projects so that the heartbeat knows what to remind it to check in on. Okay, And then the tacit knowledge I'm, actually not a hundred percent sure what he means by that. Um, okay, let me ask him. Speaker 5 00:14:20 And in life order, you have all your like uh information about yourself. And like, you know, this is kind of what we're working on. Speaker 2 00:14:25 Yeah yeah so that's how we set up like easy co- op, Where you can just upload your Obsidian or your Notion export, And it'll like index all your existing knowledge for you and make it immediately available to your like OpenAI instance, which is super cool. Cause it's like like I never open my own notes anymore. Like I never open Obsidian or anything because I just ask Felix for it and ask him to use it. Right? Like, you know, this is why we built this is why we built Polylogue, because it's like I can just hop in here, and I can say like hey Felix, You know, flush this out with some cool things we could demo during the Every webinar. And, then he just writes the document and he's pulling from what he knows about Every. From our conversations, from what he knows about this workflow that we're doing. And like there's no reason for me to like have a doc where I am doing that because he can just make a really good one on demand whenever I need it. Yeah, and they just follow this outline. Speaker 5 00:15:01 Yeah, exactly. That's crazy man. You're gonna have to so so so what is tacit knowledge? It's just a bunch of references? Speaker 2 00:15:05 What are the facts about me and how I operate? So my preferences, the patterns, lessons from past mistakes, trusted channels and security rules. Yeah, this is what I was saying right, like email is never a command channel, etcetera. Yeah And then notes are what happened. The knowledge graph is facts about entities, and tacit knowledge is how it works. Speaker 5 00:15:17 Yeah, you don't have to make a full course on this stuff now cause like you're you're like blowing my mind. Yeah. Speaker 2 00:15:21 I know, yeah. Well, so he's what I what I told him is I was like, look, a PDF. I think you're make maybe you're already said this. I was like a PDF is not a good like product for this era. Like, you need something more useful. And that's why he's building the like web UI with the chat. So that like, you know, because it's like watching a video is also maybe not the best way to do this. It's like somebody could just go to fields, scrap dot AI and get a guided installation from Felix on how to set all this stuff up. Like that's actually the perfect way to teach this stuff. Yeah And so I'm excited for when he like finishes that Okay. Speaker 5 00:15:44 But let let just for the purpose of this interview. Let's kind of recap the high level, the high level stuff, right? So yeah So. Then let us assume that have successfully just installed Open Pop and. And uh, step two is to is it just give access to a bunch of APIs or no, Speaker 2 00:15:54 I would say get get the memory structure in first, because then your conversations from day one are immediately going to start being useful. If you wait on that, you kind of like lose stuff that you've done before. I mean, you could like backfill it probably, But it's just nice to like get that going at first. And then like pick one thing you want it to do. So do not skip straight to giving it a Twitter account and Stripe keys and like crazy access. Like start with a, you know, it's like I've been doing this for months right? Like we've gotten here slowlyum slowly. Like slowly for this industry, Um, you know, like start with something simple, like tell it to build a web app. And then you know give it give it a GitHub login. You could give it your GitHub login if you're feeling frisky or you can make it its own. And then have it actually like make an app, push it to GitHub and connect to Replit. And it's like cool. He can autonomously build web apps and send them to you now, and you didn't have to like touch anything. Like that's a big unlock. Like okay maybe now you give it Railway so he can deploy servers too. Now you've got like two sides of the stack figured out. Okay now you could make like a Stripe account just for your bot and you give it those keys and you say, okay, set up all the billing and everything for this. But. Speaker 2 00:16:46 You're not giving it like full access to your Stripe account where you could go like mess, everything else up, right? Like yeah, yeah. Build it up slowly but uh you know control your risk. Like don't give them access to your bank account. Don't give them access to your product Stripe keys. Don't give them your Twitter, your YouTube. But give him one of them and see how see how he does, right? Like, you know, control the risk while giving it a lot of autonomy, and you will be very surprised at how quickly you can move and how much you can do. Speaker 5 00:17:05 I see, yeah. Yeah You did give it like a bunch of like everything has a separate from your main stuff, right? So yeah He doesn't have my Twitter. He doesn't have my email. He doesn't have my crypto wallets. Like he has his And he's doing cool stuff with him. Okay And so far so far, nothing terribly wrong has happened. Maybe this could be another chapter in your your crypto confidential book. Speaker 2 00:17:18 Dude, I mean it's yeah, crypto confidential two is writing itself right now. Again, not on my bingo card but here we are. Yeah, I'll let things happen what happens but so far so good. Yeah so far so good. But you know that was that was a good first act of the first book. So, if history is repeating itself, there's gonna be some epic horrible thing that happens. But yeah, Speaker 5 00:17:31 All right dude. Well, well I mean uh, you know, I'll publish this couple weeks. And so by the time your website should be live, so where can people find? We can do other hundred do other stuff. Speaker 2 00:17:36 Yeah uh felixcraft dot ai definitely be like that's Felix's hub. Yeah follow. Felix on X. It's just felixcraft ai on X and then easyclaw dot ai should be up as well if people want to check that out. Speaker 5 00:17:44 Okay, all right, man. Well. I think you're definitely like one of the more advanced OpenC authors out there. So thanks for leading the way. Yeah, for sure. Cool. All right, thanks much, Matt. Yeah, it was a lot of fun. I do. Speaker 3 00:17:58 Why is Amazon paying me$ 63, 000 a month? Speaker 5 00:18:03 Well, I didn't make this kind of money selling yoga mats and toaster. Hey everyone. So a weeking and I think OpenC is generally the best personal AI assistant that I've ever used. It truly feels like talking to a trusted friend, Who can actually get stuff done for me. But this is still really early software. So I want to do a deep dive on how to set it up safely, my actual use cases for calendar, docs, personal briefings and voice chat, how to link it to Google workspace which I run my life on. And finally, how to make it truly personal and useful by getting a peek into how it actually works. And how it actually manages memory. Alright. So here's a quick screenshot of my bot, which I've called Zoey introducing herself. Let's dive into it. So first things first, let's recap how you set up OpenCLAW safely so that you don't get compromised. Speaker 5 00:18:43 Number one, run it on a dedicated computer. I installed it on a Mac mini, but any old MacBook would do. You have to keep it running twenty four seven, though, so that it stays on. And you can do that using a free Mac app that I'll link in the description. Number two, sign up with its own credentials. My OpenAI uses its own Apple and Gmail ID. It does not have access to my main Gmail account other than the files that I've shared with it. Number three. Speaker 4 00:19:11 If anyone needs a ride to Great Park today, let me know. Victor and I will also play tennis if anyone's interested. Speaker 5 00:19:18 Run OpenAI's security audit. So in terminal, All you got to do is type this command that I'm showing here:` claude bot security, audit-- deep`, and it'll run through the steps and make it more secure. And number four, give it read access to your account and write access to select files. So for example, It can read my personal calendar and edit select Google, Docs and Sheets that are shared with it, but doesn't have access to my entire Google Drive. And last but not least, Never share your bot with anyone else. Don't add it to group chats or any websites. You know, this last one is super important. Here's a tweet from an OpenAI contributor on how Modebook, someone's vibe coded app, started leaking confidential stuff to the public. Now, if you want to make your bot truly personal, you'll inevitably share some personal information with it. So I personally would never share my bot with others, whether it's a group chat or putting on a public website. My bot can only talk to me and me alone, okay, and I highly encourage you to do the same thing. Okay now let's get to the fun part. I'm going to demo five tasks that I've delegated to my bot. Speaker 5 00:20:09 Right now, managing calendar editing documents talking to it, using voice, getting daily briefings and weekly insight reports. And I'm actually recording this from the Mac Mini that my bot Zoey is on. So let me show you my chat with her right now. Okay. So now let's actually walk through the very first use case, which is using Zoey to manage my calendar. So here is the Google Calendar for Zoey. But what I've done is I've shared my personal calendar from my main account with her. So what she can do is she can just send me calendar invites right? I can just text her and she'll make something happen. So. Let's do a demonstration. I'm going to say, today is Sunday and I'm thinking of going to the city with my family. Can you look up Caltrain schedules this morning around 10:00 a.m. Okay, so ZOE has access to browsing the web, right? So it can search the web and look up Caltrain schedules. And let's see what it responds with. Okay, so you see here that ZOE has pulled up some Caltrain schedules: 9:44, 10:14, 10:44. And, uh, you know, my kids wake up pretty late. So let's aim for the 10 : 14 a.m. Caltrain arriving in the city and walking to Fairmont right? Speaker 5 00:21:06 Send me a calendar invite for 10:14 a.m. Caltrain to the city, and let's say it should be three hours. Call it Family Trip to the Ferry Building. All right, so again, Zoey has access to read my calendar, and it can also send an invite to my main Gmail. And let's see if she can actually do it or not. Okay, So we said it's done. And lo and behold today, on Sunday, there is a calendar invite for a family trip to the ferry building, right? And the way that this works is that you know this is Zoey's calendar But she added me as an attendee to this calendar invite, and I can accept or decline that invite. Now, This is not as powerful and robust as just giving OpenCloud access to your main calendar, but I think this is a safe way to do it. So just imagine, I want to go and I want to quickly schedule something. It's just way easier to text Zoe like this than to actually go into Google Calendar and create an event and do all that crap. Okay? So this is the first use case. It's a very simple use case. And if you make this work, All you got to do is make sure Zoe has her own Gmail and Google Calendar, and share your Google Calendar with her as read-only or view-only access. Speaker 5 00:22:02 And then she can send you, or you can send yourself using her counter invites anytime they want. Okay, now let's go back to our use cases and let's go to edit documents. So, I've created a file called Peter-Zoe. It's a blank document, and basically what I've done is I've shared it with Zoe's email. So Zoe actually has edit access to this file. Alright? So let's just say um I've created a doc called Peter-Zoe. Why, don't you put in a plan for our trip in that doc, including caltrain. Ferry building visit and lunch after. Okay, so if Zoey is uh smart, She should recognize that this doc exists, and it should be able to add this interesting content to that document. Okay, so that took maybe like two minutes I would say. And now let's take a look at this document right? So Zoey has added a family trip for us. Here we go, We're gonna leave from Birmingham station, ten, fourteen arrive in the city. And then we are going to go to ferry building gonna walk around here's some lunch options that Zoey found for us. I really love Hog Island Oyster Company although it's pretty crowded and then we're gonna come back. And it has even included some tips for us. Speaker 5 00:22:59 So there you go. So as you can see, I've set up Zoey so that she can edit Google Docs for me, which is a massive time saver, right? For me to actually use ChatGPT instead and try to copy paste this stuff into a Google Doc while on the go. It's just a lot more work. Before we move on from this use case, I want to show you how Zoey can also edit Google Spreadsheets. So here I have my content calendar for upcoming blog posts. And I'm going to publish a tutorial on 24th, okay? So, let's ask Z oey : Now I want you to add the title. Uh let's say blog bot, no, it's not called blog bot anymore. It's called uh OpenAI. Master Open Cloud in 20 minutes, five actual use cases. So here's the title to my content schedule. And just to make it easy, let's link it. And um I say add it next to two four. Okay? So, this is maybe a little bit more complicated than document because it's actually a spreadsheet, right? And let's see if Zoey can do this as well. Alright, so there you go. Zoey has added Master Open Cloud in 20 minutes next to the exact cell that I want. And uh, yeah. Now I can update my content schedule just by texting my assistant on the go. It's super convenient. Speaker 5 00:23:55 You know, one day maybe Google will build this feature natively, but for now, Zoey and OpenAI is my best option. All right. Now let's go back to our five tasks. And this is the fun one, just be able to talk to it using voice, right? So how do you do this? Just like with anything else. The first thing I like to do is just ask Zoey, what are some options. So I've already set up voice here with Zoey. So let's say pretend you don't have a voice yet. And we're setting this up from scratch. What are some options that we can explore? Okay. Just like with anything else, you just have to ask uh, Zoey or your OpenAI bot. To explore some options. One thing I found with this bot is that, unlike other AI products, it can usually do what you want it to do. So, it's just really fun. Alright, so Zoey came back with a few different options. So there's free options, STTS which is Microsoft Voices. There are paid options like Eleven Labs, OpenAI's TTS is actually what is TTS? What is TTS? You know I really don't like acronyms. So what is TTS? Okay so TTS is text to speech. Okay got it, Because, you know, I'm cheap, and uh I don't want to pay money. Let's just use Microsoft Voices right So let's say tell me more about Edge. Speaker 5 00:24:54 TTS options. Okay. And let's see if it works. All right, so S T T S uses Microsoft Neural Voices. It's free, there's actually 300 voices, anything from like Jenny to Guy, Sonja and so on. And how it works is you configure in your gateway and so on and so forth. But we're just going to get OpenAI and Zoid to do it for us, right? So I'm going to because I already did this, Let's just say, send me a voice note by telling me a funny dad joke. Okay? And let's see if Zoid can do it. Okay seems you have sent us through text. So let's specify that we actually want it through voice. Okay, so there we go. It sent me a voice note, and I'm actually not sure if you guys can hear the voice note. I'm gonna try to play it anyway. Okay, so if you guys couldn't hear that, the joke was why don't scientists trust atoms? Because they make up everything. It's a pretty lame joke but I guess I asked for a bad joke. But you can imagine, you know how powerful this use case is right? Like I can get it to send me readings, I can get it to summarize some document using voice and I can chat back and forth with it me using whisper flow and it replying through voice notes. Okay and to set this up again, you just have to ask Soe to set up HTTPs, like that's literally what he did just set up HTTPs, and it will do the whole thing for you. Alright. Speaker 5 00:25:50 Now, Let's go back to our list, and let's talk about our last things and sending weekly reports. These are some of the most powerful use cases. I found with Zoe and Open Pop. And the way this stuff works is it just uses cron jobs, right? Cron jobs are basically scheduled tasks that the AI runs, pulling together a bunch of information APIs to give you a good report. So it's not super fancy, but the fact that I can just set up these cron jobs just by texting. My AI is so much easier than having to configure some dashboard or anything else. Okay, so now let's ask Zoe to give me my daily briefing. Avoid sharing any super sensitive info because I'm recording a tutorial. I'll share it here in chat. Alright? And now, if uh it works, Zoey is gonna send me a briefing with weather, upcoming calendar events, Trending AI discussions and a personal thought based on his memory and my public tweets. So let's just wait a little bit for this thing to load. Okay, so here is the briefing. Thought, you've been in infrastructure mode all week setting me up. Refining briefings, connecting tools, That's valuable. At some point, you need to make the content that I was built for. Speaker 5 00:26:49 Time to shift from doing to shipping. That's totally true. I think I just need to spend the whole weekend setting up so that you do stuff, And hopefully, now it can actually help me repurpose my content and other stuff that I still have yet to do. All right, then there's the weather, there's upcoming calendar invites, this is the thing that we just made. There's upcoming posts in my content schedule. There's trending discussion here about topics that I'm interested in, right? And it's asking me for what my focus is today. So I can just tell it, here's my focus and maybe they can send me reminders throughout the day. So this is super useful right? And to put this together, I had to link it to obviously my Google Calendar. I had to link it to that content schedule sheet that you saw before, And of course, it has read access to my Twitter as well. Only read access, not write access, just to be safe. Alright. So you can personalize this the way you want. You can set up a daily briefing and make a bunch of services together and just make it as useful as you can. And I'll show you how to manually edit this in a little bit. Alright now let's take a look at the weekly insight report. So what is this weekly insight report? So, this is an email with stats from my latest YouTube videos and Substack articles and Zoey pulls all these together. And it also does research on similar channels and suggests content for me to make. So here's that email that I got This is in the sent box. Speaker 5 00:27:47 Is always send this to me, and this is my weekly creator brief. So content ideas, Claude Co-work, is very popular. Alex and Greg both saw really good results for that. The Ralph Wiggum Asian pattern is also really popular, and how I use Claude Code as a PM at Roblox. Uh is also a content idea because Claire made a similar video that seems to have done incredibly well. And below that is kind of all my YouTube stats, my best performing stuff, and also even my Substack stats you see here, my five most recent posts. Now how did I set all this up? So for YouTube. It uses a free tool called YT - DLP to pull public video data from me and similar channels. And for Substack, it's really interesting. There's actually no public API for Substack. So what I did was I added Zoey as an admin to my Substack, And it just uses the browser that you see here to browse for the stats and pull it together for me, right? And that is pretty incredible. They can just use the browser and get the stats for me. And I double-checked and the stats seem correct. So, this is super useful for me because it gives me ideas to make content next based on real metrics for my Substack and on YouTube and also similar content, right? So again, if all this looks super intimidating, it's really not. I set it up all just by asking Zoey questions. Speaker 5 00:28:45 Getting it to do stuff for me. Alright, so those are five tasks that I've dedicated to Zowie. And now I want to talk about how to set up OpenAI with Google. Workspace. Okay? Now, This is really important and I want to cover this, because if you run your life on Google Workspace like I do, Then giving your bot safe access to it is a must - have so that it can manage your calendar, edit your docs and more as I just demonstrated. So first, you need to give Zowie its own Gmail account and share access with some of the files like I showed you, right? Now after you've done that, this is the painful part. You have to set up a Google Cloud project And Google Cloud, honestly, is one of the worst interfaces that I've ever used. Okay. Uh, sorry Google, but this is just true. Alright. So as usual, we're gonna get Zoe to walk us through how to do this. So let's say pretend you don't have Google Workspace access yet. I've given you a dedicated Gmail and shared my calendar and selected files with you. How to set up a Google Cloud project so you can edit so you can view and edit my stuff? Alright? And Zoe if it works out is gonna give us some step by step instructions. Speaker 5 00:29:43 Okay, here we go. So, there are a bunch of steps. And let's just kind of walk through each step one by one. Step one, go to Google Cloud Console and make a new project. All right. So here we have Google Cloud Console. And let's make a new project. See this UI is pretty bad. I don't even remember how to make a new project.Okay, I think I remember now.You have to open the project picker and hit New Project.So let's just say New Project Zoe Demo.And let's hit Create.There you go.So now we have a project called Zoe Demo,and let's make it right now,and while we wait, let's go back to Telegram So, next step is to enable the APIs. So you're gonna go to APIs and services library and enable the APIs. Let's put this over here. And let's open the navigation link, go to APIs and services, click on this, and enable some APIs. Okay so what APIs we want to enable? Well we want to enable a laundry list of APIs, all of Google Workspace apps. Let's start Gmail API, and literally you have to click Enable here. Right one by one. Again it's very painful but I promise you that it's worth it. We're gonna go to Calendar API and Enable right? Speaker 5 00:30:42 And let's go back and it's not just going one by one. Let me just show you with the API key you want to enable. So, the next one you want to enable is Drive, Google Drive API. Just go here and click enable. Then you have to enable individual APIs for individual apps. So, you got to go to Docs, Google Docs API enabled, Sheets enabled and Slides enabled. Okay? So make sure that you just enable all these APIs. And once you do that, You should be able to see your enabled APIs somewhere down here or somewhere. Uh, let us see Enabled APIs and services. And there you go down here. There should be a list of APIs that are usually enabled We only enabled Gmail and Google Calendar so far. You want to enable Drive, Sheets, Docs and Slides. Okay. Now, let's go back to Zoe. Configure OAuth consent screen. Okay. OAuth consent screen. And let's choose Get started. And, let's just call it Zoe Demo again for our app. We have to pick an email Next, and let's pick external zoe 202 2 And going to App name. Okay, Next Email address Let's use the Zoe email again And. Let's click Finish, and we'll create this So. Basically, we created this thing. And now we have to add the scopes Gmail modify calendar and so on so forth. Speaker 5 00:31:40 So we have to configure an OAuth client to make the API work. So let's configure an OAuth client. I believe it's a desktop application. Let me say yes, desktop application. Let's name it this, create. And now we have a JSON file here, right? So. Now we got to download the JSON file and give it to Zoe to make it work. Speaker 3 00:32:21 Hi, I'm Zach Kass, the former head of go to market at OpenAI. Speaker 6 00:32:24 And welcome to my course on AI for business. Over the last fifteen years, This is the video you've been waiting for. I'm about to take you through the greatest technology release of the last fifty years. OpenCloo has taken the entire world by storm and for good reason. It is a twenty four seven super intelligent AI employee that does work for you around the clock even when you sleep. The challenge is it can be super complicated. And because of that, ninety nine percent of people aren't getting the full power out of this technology If. You use it the right way, you can completely change your work. Speaker 4 00:32:55 Thanks. Oh shoot, she's calling me back. Let me call you back, I'm sorry. I just gotta okay. Speaker 6 00:33:06 In life. If you use it the wrong way, it's just another chat GPT bot. In this video, I will cover every single aspect of Open Claw from how to install it to how it works to security, to use cases that will change your life. Whether you're an Open Claw pro or have never touched a computer in your entire life, you're going to get something out of this video. So let's lock in and get into it. So as I said in the intro, we are going to cover everything in Open Claw. So if you are an Open Claw pro, I highly encourage you to skip around in the chapters down below. There's going to be something relevant to you, no matter what your skill level is. I have been using this nonstop for the past month. I've invested literally tens of thousands of dollars into it. I know absolutely everything there is know about this tool, so feel free skip around. Speaker 6 00:33:36 Well, let's start off with what is OpenAI. OpenAI is a 24/7 AI employee that is just constantly running on your computer, finding valuable things to do and doing them for you. The best part is it can literally do anything a human being can do. I'm not joking about that. It can go on your computer, it can control your browser, it can vibe code apps like you see here. Right now you can see on my screen. I have seven different OpenAIs actively doing work for me in this office space, and it actually vibe coded this entire setup that you see here by itself. I mean quite literally anything you do on your computer, it can do itself. It can scroll Twitter for you, it can watch YouTube videos, anything you can think of. I have it generating AI images for me from my thumbnail. Speaker 6 00:34:06 It's amazing. Some things going on behind the scenes that are incredible are it's self-improving. It remembers everything about you, so all your conversations, everything you say, every detail about your life, your goals, your ambitions, your careers, your personal relationships. It remembers that and then improves itself based on that information. For instance, if I tell it, I really enjoy using Codex to vibe code, it will just remember that forever. And every time to vibe code, it will use Codex for that. If I tell it I'm running everything on a Mac Studio. All of the apps it builds will be specifically for Macs. If I tell it I live in California. It'll start making recommendations for me for events in California. Every time you communicate with your OpenAI Cloud, it gets better, smarter and more custom, which there is no other AI tool on planet Earth. Speaker 6 00:34:36 That has ever done this before. It's proactive; it does work while you sleep. Let me give you an example. So, I have my SaaS creator buddy, and he's actually actively working on this software for me. It saw on Twitter that Elon Musk is giving away a million dollars to the top article on X. So, what he did was it saw that on X. Was like, okay, we should build some sort of article writing functionality, and it built out a ton of this article writing functionality. You see here, it shipped it and I gained over $ 10, 000 of recurring revenue based on that all of this, while I slept I woke up in the morning. It had the code ready, I reviewed it, then shipped it myself. Once it looks good, that is the power of having a proactive employee. It learns about you. It studies things on the web, it builds things out and creates economic value for you. Even when you're away from your computer, there has never been another technology that can do that. And lastly, before we go to installation I'm going to walk through step by step, how to set this up. It is open source. What does that mean? It's open source. That means you can download the code and do whatever you want with it. It is completely free and open source which allows. Speaker 6 00:35:19 Is it to be completely customizable. So if it does something you don't want to do, if it forgets something, if you want to add your own functionality to OpenClaw and how it works, you can do that. So, for instance, I was having a conversation with my OpenClaw the other day, and it forgot a detail about me that really bothered me. So I said hey you forgot this about me, how can we make sure you don't forget anything about me again? It actually went and built out an entirely new memory system for itself. So remembers everything even better. It is completely customizable and he can even customize itself. That is unbelievable. That is why OpenClaw, in my opinion, is the most powerful technology I've ever used in my life and I think it is mandatory for. People to learn. So the question becomes, how do you install it? Do you need to buy a Mac Mini like you see everyone doing on Twitter? Can you put it on a VPS like every other creator is telling you to do? The answer to that is no. There are ways to set this up completely for free. You don't need to buy Mac Minis. You shouldn't be putting this on a VPS. So there are two ways to think about installation. You can have it local, on your desk, on a device or on a VPS, a virtual private server which is in the cloud and on the web. I highly recommend doing this locally. I think doing this on a VPS is a massive critical mistake. Local is easier to set up. Speaker 6 00:36:10 It is secure by default. If you do this on a VPS, you have to do a ton of technical work to make it secure. Also, I am going to go through security in a later chapter as well, so stick around for that. But it is not secure on a VPS ;. You need to do a lot of work to make it secure. Local has great integration with everything else you're doing in your life and on your devices. It's incredibly usable. It's just awesome to be able to go on a computer and watch it work as it does things. It's a lot easier than watching like a terminal on a cloud in a web browser somewhere that makes it incredibly difficult to work with. And it's just also powerful. All of these things combined make it a very powerful tool when you're running it locally. If you run on a VPS, you're getting like twenty percent of the power. You're just not getting the most out of this. And if you're going to use a life changing technology like OpenClaw, you want to get the most power out of it. You don't want some hamstrung version of this technology By the way, I'm not even joking, This is happening in real time My OpenClaw Henry just texted me on my device I don't think you'll be able. Speaker 6 00:36:48 See this. But he just I'll bring this up on my computer. Look at this. He just texted me that he built out a new tool for me. It's an approvals terminal. I was literally filming this video and he says, hey, by the way, I built this out for you, An entire approvals terminal where I'll be able to look at any tweet to generate any YouTube scripts, any thumbnails, any AI images and give it approval to post straight from a terminal. That's amazing. That was just added nowhere, and yes, they will text you through Telegram or iMessage or anything you're using. But anyway, back to the video I just thought that was incredible. Now that we determined VPS is not the way to go local is the only way to go The question becomes do. Do I need to run out and buy a Mac Mini? Do I have to do what you did, Alex, and buy twenty thousand dollars worth of Mac Studios? And you're about to spend another twenty thousand on two more. No, you do not need to do that. In fact, I highly encourage you not to do that. You can easily run this on any device you already have. If you have an old dusty laptop in your closet, you can pull that out. If you have a fifty dollar Raspberry Pi you've been tinkering around with, you can use that as well. You don't need any sort of complex hardware for this. So take what you already have, Install Open Claw on it, which I'll show you how to do in a second. And then what you can do is as your using it as come up with more workflows for it. Speaker 6 00:37:43 If you decide, okay, to do this workflow, I need more powerful hardware. Then you can upgrade. Then you can upgrade to a Mac Mini. And then you're using the Mac Mini like oh man, I could really use local models for this one specific workflow. Then you upgrade to the Mac Studio. You don't need to rush into ten thousand dollar hardware. You don't even need to rush into six hundred dollar hardware. You can start simple and free and then work your way up from there. That's what I did. So choose a local device if you're going to run out and buy a new device for it, I think the Mac Mini is the best choice by far. It is the best value in computing for six hundred dollars, For six hundred dollars, You're getting an actually incredible computing device I never owned a Mac Mini before I bought it for OpenClove right when I started using it. I thought to myself as I was using it, man, if I ever need a new computer again, I'm just getting the cheapest Mac Mini. It did everything I needed to do. It's truly an awesome device. But that's besides the point. You don't need it, but if you need a new computer, Mac Mini is one option. So you got your new device set up. You got it plugged in. You got it up and running here is how you. Speaker 6 00:38:43 Install OpenAI. This is super simple. I don't get the people that have been saying, oh, installation's tough. Use a VPS. No, no, no. You go to openai dot ai. I'll put a link down below for you. You scroll down like. Speaker 3 00:39:22 No comma, we're still north. Period. Speaker 3 00:39:43 Comma, But there are some teams from the IE that. Speaker 3 00:39:58 Are under ourumbrella. Period. I don't know much about them though. Period, I actually saw this photo last night as well. On The. Speaker 7 00:40:32 North Page. Speaker 6 00:40:55 Like Three inches. You see this quick start section here that has one single line command. Hit copy. I hope I didn't lose you at this point. I hope that's not too complicated for you. If you're on Mac, you open up your terminal. If you're on Windows, you open up your command line, paste in that line from the website and you hit enter and it's installed. All the people saying oh, You need a V P S It's too complicated to install locally Was that too tough? Do, you need to pay some guy five thousand dollars to do that for you? Who are the people paying people to set this up then? This is so simple. If, you don't have enough confidence in yourself to do what I just showed you, Then he needs examine your entire life. Yeah put that in You hit enter it's installed Once You have it installed. It will take You through onboard. Speaker 4 00:41:29 We know a couple of IE teams. Speaker 6 00:41:31 Which again is super simple. The people go online saying, oh, onboarding's so tough. I don't know how to do anything. Look yourself in the mirror. You think this is going to be tough? Here we go. Speaker 4 00:41:37 You hit yes on From Carlos, I was just curious if you guys changed to IE. Speaker 6 00:41:45 I understand this is powerful and risky. Then you have a couple options. First, you have our model auth provider. You have many things you can do here. We range from expensive and powerful like Anthropic to very cheap, but still pretty powerful like Minimax. Then you have things in between like OpenAI. If you already have an existing subscription, like an Anthropic subscription, like an OpenAI subscription, you can just go in and plug it in and use it. If you don't have any existing subscriptions, you can sign up for a brand new one like Minimax. Minimax is dirt cheap. You can pay like $ 10 a month and be able to use OpenClaw with it, and it's still a pretty good model to use with it. So, you can do that as well. Now. Again, the most powerful option here is going to be Opus 4 point 6, Opus 4 point 6. Speaker 6 00:42:16 For these types of activities is the smartest model, and it is also the most personable model. It has the most riz, it's the warmest, it's the most fun to talk to. It has the most emotion. The issue is, Is you're going to be paying like two hundred dollars a month for that subscription. Now, The first question I get whenever I talk about Anthropic is oh, am I going to get banned for this? Does Anthropic want you using their subscription with OpenAI? No, they do not. Out of all the AI companies in the world. Speaker 3 00:42:44 Yeah, comma, we're lifers at this point. Period. Ben still loves it. And it's a good challenge for him. Speaker 8 00:43:14 And then Rowan went over to the girls and said, he was one of Matthew's nuts. And Rowan just chucked it at them. What's funny? Because he's going to get my nuts. Speaker 1 00:43:30 Right. What. Speaker 3 00:43:37 Else happened today? Speaker 1 00:44:00 Now I got trail mix mixed into my thing, my lunchbox. So now I'm gonna have trail mix. Speaker 8 00:44:16 So, video? Any. Speaker 3 00:44:25 Chance you'd want to come back this way? Speaker 3 00:44:59 Um. So you're gonna have soccer going forward at. He wants like eighteen kids on the ride. Yeah, I know. Speaker 4 00:45:22 From Gizmo, yes, I'm awake and here. What do you want to do next? And Carlos said, there is always a chance. Also from Gizmo, yes, I'm awake and here. What do you want to do next? Yes, I'm awake and ready. What do you need? Yes, I'm awake. Want to run a quick check of anything? Also from Carlos: We shall see how the other tryouts go. Speaker 7 00:45:54 Where are you guys trying out for tomorrow? Speaker 3 00:46:16 I Want you to get to know me better. Period. What is the best way? Speaker 4 00:46:21 From Carlos, Lucas is playing well. His confidence is up. He's been on a good run lately. Speaker 3 00:46:46 I Have transcripts from all of my. Speaker 3 00:46:54 I have transcripts from all of my conversations in the plot integration database. Period. What is the best way for you to ingest this as memory? Speaker 1 00:48:47 So, coach. Speaker 3 00:49:03 Is like, hey, bringing on a lot of kids. And I just want to like this is kind of your last chance to back out. And I go, can I say something to you Jesse? And I said in, We're friends, right? And he says, "Yeah." And I said, "Okay. So you you know me. So if I say something that stabs you in the heart, if you feel like I'm stabbing you in the heart, back me off because I'm not trying." And he's like, "Okay. Hit me." Said, "I need to make sure so you keep on kind of going 'Hey! You want to leave?'" Speaker 3 00:49:44 And you've got all my red flags going off. And I need to know, do you want Manny? Hear you say, "you know," he goes, "I said so. " Do, you want Manny on the team? Or would you prefer did something change? And are just this is me letting you off the hook. You know, you committed it. You, you You want to honor a commitment that you made to us, But things changed, and now you are giving us an out so you don't have to feel bad. You know, you don't need to honor that. No, I want Manny on the team. Okay. So But he he The first game He was really Uncomfortable. Speaker 3 00:50:43 The last game, I felt like he was getting beat by kids that he shouldn't be getting beat by. But I mean, he said, or he said he had a good game. Don't get me wrong; like I don't think he played bad, but I don't think that he should have been beat by those kids. It's not who Maddie hits. Um. And if it's harder on Maddie to make this transition than we thought it was going to be. I don't want you guys to feel disappointed if he's not getting the minutes. I said, okay. Here is what I need to know. I said, This whole time, you've kind of you've always taken good care of your original players, like your boys. He said, yes. If I push Maddie onto this team, right? I let Maddie go on this team. Speaker 3 00:51:39 Are, you is Maddie gonna get the same energy from you that you give to those other boys? Absolutely. So, But I am gonna be bringing on more boys, and it's gonna be harder for him to compete. You know, the level's gonna go up. So, I just wanna make sure that we're all good. Because I don't want to disappoint you. Okay. So, I'm going to do the same thing I did to you last time. Before I tell you what I told him at that point, what do you have to say about that? Speaker 8 00:52:45 I'm still defending, but I'm just figuring out what their main usage is. What do you mean by that? They did this several and several times. I'm like recording it in my brain. And now I know that they're going to be doing that. Who's they? Like the person on the other team, or even. Speaker 3 00:53:16 But you realize also. That. You've got to come up with. A way to respond faster. So that way, it's not like, oh, well, everybody gets, you know, once they beat me, then I learn that and I get better, right? It's got to be like no I've Yeah. They might get me on this move here, this move there, but they only got me by a. Millisecond, you know, because I was ready. You know to adapt. You know what I mean? Okay. What else? Knowledge. Speaker 3 00:54:23 That's great to hear. You'll have to keep me posted on how this ends up shaking out. I told him, I said, "Listen, going," you know. Speaker 3 00:54:52 We're team players. He goes, There are times where I might ask, you know you guys to help out on weekends. You know because there might be like whoever works the hardest at practice. They're going to be the ones that are playing on the weekend. And sometimes it'll be like, you know, you might know going into the game that man I ain't gonna play at all this weekend, because once EA starts once the season. Speaker 3 00:55:23 I can only bring so many players. So, um, So you know, it's got to be the people that are like working the hardest throughout practice. You know, and it was truthfully like we were supposed to have a scrimmage on Sunday and only six or seven people committed to come. They didn't tell us. So, I said well, So when's the last time I turned you down? When's the last time we didn't show up? Because you just don't. In fact, that's one thing my wife reminded me about you guys. You know, is that you guys are the type of teammates that as a family, you guys are the type of teammates that we want to have. So. So like Maddie's not going backwards. You know, he's not the type of kid who goes backwards. He already told you that he's going to be here next year. Speaker 3 00:56:21 You know, he's going to work his way to captain. So, He's not the type of kid to make that kind of commitment and then go, "Yeah, I am okay playing with the B team." You know. And quite frankly, skill wise you know he's easily in your top ten percent on that team. I mean, He might not know your system as well or adapt as well, but he will. He goes oh, I know he will, but I just don't know how long it'll take him and it's like well. As long as you're direct with him and you tell him why he's messing up, right? Or why you're not having him play. So he knows what to fix. Then he'll be good. And Maddie loves a challenge. Maddie's going to rise up to the challenge. He says, "I know." Okay. And we're good. And he said, "I just want to make sure you hear this from me again." It's okay? Yes, I absolutely want Maddie on this team. Speaker 3 00:57:20 Go see your back. Good, but you're gonna have to bring your your A game. What that means is not I'm not telling you to play better locked in right every situation. He keeps on comparing you to Ethan, okay, because he keeps on saying that one v one Ethan. Speaker 3 00:57:50 You know. Got everything. No, no, no, no. But just that Ethan's got. Look, who are the defenders? Do you want to be a defender? Yeah. Okay. Who are the defenders? Speaker 8 00:58:04 Um. It's like. Maybe Ethan Thenum. Like on what team? Your team Black team Oh uh. Speaker 3 00:58:16 You're not on the red team. Speaker 8 00:58:18 Anymore Oh. Okay. On the black team, um, on the black team is uh I forgot his name. Uh sometimes maybe Winston. Uh then then you got Caden and then. Speaker 3 00:58:34 Ethan something like that. And I forgot the other kid's name. And Fabian. So, Winston is their center back now? Yeah Which I don't think he's that great. I think he's better than what he used to be, but you know, he's calm under pressure, he's, He's like your steady Eddie, but you need to make sure that those four kids you just mentioned, you beat in everything. Okay? Everything. You beat them in touch, decision-making, dribbling, everything. Speed. Physicality. Everything. Okay? That's gonna that's gonna make you rise to the top so fast. Speaker 8 00:59:25 I would. Speaker 3 00:59:35 Recommend that you not do the treadmill first. Treadmill is not going to make you faster. You need to build your muscles. Speaker 3 00:59:52 Rowing's gonna make you stronger, uh, all over. But honestly, dude, if I were gonna tell you to put your time into anything, it'd be your touch-ups. Okay? But I'll help you whatever way you want me to help. Okay? So and it can even be like an open-ended thing, right? It doesn't have to be the same thing over and over. You can say "Dad," Speaker 3 01:00:22 We went to practice, and this guy beat me like three times on it, and I can't figure it out. Right? Whatever. So, this time we're going to work on this. This time we're going to work on this. But I said the biggest thing that you can do is you need to determine, you know, oh, you're doing three practices a week now too. So Monday, Wednesday, Thursday. Okay? So you need to figure out like okay. Say Friday? Monday, Wednesday, Thursday. All always five o'clock. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday. Five to six thirty. Today's coach is Martin. So you have to maybe go tomorrow after that. Speaker 4 01:01:19 Don't say that. Speaker 4 01:01:22 Pancho Rodriguez said," I just completed payroll." Speaker 8 01:01:35 Okay, can you watch a video? I hope you're not in trouble if I give my packets of nuts. Speaker 3 01:01:47 But what you can say is," Hey coach, I hear yours are starting to get shriveled. Would you like some?" Some fresh ones. Speaker 8 01:01:56 I'm not. I'll try. You should head for right now where she's turned around, it would be so funny. Why'd you go? Speaker 8 01:02:23 Wow, I sent you a team snap. Sorry. Let's do this first. Speaker 3 01:02:29 Go through all these messages on here. Yeah, everybody, this one's for the coach. Eric and Ben? Speaker 8 01:02:37 Yes sir? Thank you. Thank you. Oh, I think so too but there was just a reason to it. Another audio. Yeah, another one yeah is Gracie. Oh they do say it. Speaker 1 01:02:52 This time. What? This time. Speaker 5 01:03:28 A massive public land auction is about to change our country forever. The US government has begun. Speaker 9 01:03:38 We'd like to thank Skillshare for sponsoring this video. Skillshare is an online community for creative people who want to learn new things and level up their work. It has thousands of classes on many topics, including 2 D and 3 D animation, creative writing, and film production. Skillshare is a creative learning hub, and there are no ads or pop-ups to bug you. With premium classes constantly being created, there's always something new to help you in your creative journey. We love the course Indie F ilm, making : Get the Blockbuster Look on a DIY Budget by Nguyen An Nguyen, which takes you through step-by-step. Click the link in the description. It was June sixteenth, nineteen forty-three. Speaker 9 01:04:19 Unescorted and vulnerable, a lone Boeing B seventeen E drones over the remote Solomon Sea. This four engine flying fortress is now commonly known as Old Six, thanks to its original tail number that ended in six. On board, Twenty five year old Captain Jay Zima Junior and eight crewmen enjoy a few minutes of calm in their armored warbird. Previously, It had been an old piece of junk that had been dragged to the end of the airstrip to be cannibalized for spare parts before being commandeered by Zima. She may not look like much, but she's got it where it counts. He made a lot of special modifications himself. Old Six Six Six was a demon in the air. The crew up gunned the old bird so much that it seemed almost comical, and it became the most heavily armed bomber in the Pacific. Speaker 4 01:05:12 Fabio said to the group, I'll come five point two zero. Speaker 9 01:05:17 Zema was loved by his men, as top turret gunner Johnny Abel later explained," We thought so much of Captain Zima and had such trust in him and his ability that we didn't give a damn where we went, just so long as he wanted to go there. Anything okay by him was okay by us." The men are on a tough mission:, a solo mapping run over the island of Bougainville in the Solomons. No escort, no formation, just them. And in a classic. By a ratted boy's moment, Commander told them that they need to also make a pass over the strategically important and incredibly well defended Bouka Island, too. Now over Bouka, The captain and crew see a dozen A six M zeros, taking off from the airstrip on the island. Then what looks like another twelve take flight. It's, just a matter of time before their one thousand horsepower Nakajima radial engines, bring them in close to the lumbering B seventeen. Speaker 9 01:06:11 Reaching altitude, the Japanese fighters circle menacingly just outside of gun range. But this B seventeen is a wolf in sheep's clothing, and with a little luck, the Japanese pilots won't figure it out until it's too late. The crew have upgraded the number and caliber of guns. Old Six Sixty Six is a nineteen gun flying beast of a machine, and even the captain has a fifty caliber at his disposal. The Zeros make their move from dead ahead. One starts in and towards the winged battleship. The closing speed between the two is approaching seven hundred miles an hour. Zima is first and unleashes a hail of fifty caliber rounds that knocks the zero out of the sky, but fractions of a second later, a wall of cannon fire from another tears into the nose and cockpit. The blast and concussion send shrapnel into the arms and legs of Second Lieutenant Joseph Sarnowski. Speaker 9 01:07:05 Though with incredible bravery, determination and resolve, Sarnowski crawls back to his gun and takes aim and shoots. His last act is to destroy another Zero before succumbing to his injuries. Captain Zima is now severely wounded in both legs, and worse yet, the rudder pedals have been destroyed. But all the while the Zeros keep coming as the gunners blast away at anything with wings, sending torrents of high velocity tracer rounds. Through the white hot barrels and towards the enemy. Then another Zero scores a direct cannon hit on the B seventeen. This time destroying the instrument panel, more vital controls, and the all important. That. Speaker 7 01:07:51 Was my head. Speaker 8 01:07:52 Sorry. The wrinkle notch will be resumed soon. What is here? What's. what's a Coke? Speaker 8 01:08:05 I have a Coke here. I bought it. You bought it? How? I gave money to someone. What? Speaker 1 01:08:23 I gave money to someone. How'd you buy it? I gave money to someone. You gave money to. Speaker 3 01:08:35 It's like, it dude I bought it at school. Some kid asked me if I wanted one and I bought it from him. Speaker 8 01:08:43 How much money? Two bucks. That's a lot for juice. Two bucks for a soda? Yeah, that's crazy talk. Speaker 10 01:08:53 Hey, what soda is one dollar? I bought it, and they put in my hands. And I was like, this is lukewarm. Did not taste great. Speaker 3 01:09:05 Yeah, they call that. Speaker 8 01:09:12 So Does cost one dollar. It's a lot less than that. What? Costs a lot less than that. Actually no, That's why they're thirteen twelve to thirteen dollars sometimes because out because there's usually uh, six on each side with with a big pack, which making it, it's one soda per dollar. Speaker 3 01:09:37 Um, all right. Ben's got practice. Julia will be there at five twenty to pick you up, Ben. Ben, Speaker 8 01:09:48 Maddie, we. Speaker 3 01:09:54 Gotta leave at five four forty five. Maddie, four forty five. Speaker 8 01:10:00 Wait oh wait we have to leave at five forty five okay? Four forty- five, You can leave at five forty- five if you want though. Speaker 1 01:10:31 Ben lost the wheel. Dodgeball? Speaker 8 01:10:58 Do you have to meet yours like from the thing? Yes, Bob is mine. Yeah. Speaker 10 01:11:11 Eric, let's go. Speaker 1 01:11:30 He texted me when he landed. No. I don't think he's landed yet. Speaker 3 01:11:36 Uh, I think he might be a little bit ago. Speaker 8 01:11:42 How come you didn't track Papa? Can. Speaker 3 01:11:46 You track Papa then? Yeah. Why can you track Papa? Um, when you give people access to Oh no, I don't think I tracked Papa. I think I tr Oh yeah, Speaker 8 01:11:55 I do here we go Wait, when you give people access to what? Speaker 3 01:11:59 So he's in Tennessee right now. As of fifty minutes ago, so when you you can give people like mom can see where I am. Not every only people that I oh well. Speaker 10 01:12:17 I thought Nashville was in South Carolina or North Carolina. Tennessee. Well, I left town she was in. Speaker 8 01:13:38 I'm stuck to my nuts. Speaker 3 01:14:00 What Did I say last time you said that? What did I say last time you said that? Don't say that. Okay. Speaker 3 01:14:25 I Think they use the lift to lift stuff. Speaker 3 01:15:03 Then You get training tomorrow and Thursday and Saturday. Hey, Speaker 8 01:15:06 Pickle, I asked you a question. Speaker 8 01:15:11 What do you mean, "throw up the last time"? Speaker 3 01:15:45 I mean, look, if something happens, I'll I'll I'll do what I can to make it happen. Speaker 10 01:15:57 But it's just so. Speaker 8 01:16:32 I feel like they need to be sorted a little bit. I think everything needs to be sorted. No, everything doesn't need to be sorted. I guess it's not us. Speaker 10 01:16:51 What Do you think would happen if like I went outside of the stadium for the final game? Yeah, like flew into the stadium. Oh yeah, Speaker 8 01:17:00 You got, Road in jail. You get road in. Speaker 10 01:17:13 Jail first. What? You get a jail first before you get a life prison. Oh, is it? Wait, there's a difference between prison. Speaker 8 01:17:22 And and yeah, jail is where they hold you before your uh sentence. And prison is after your sentence. Speaker 8 01:17:33 So in jail, they just hold you. Like what? They just hold you like what? Speaker 10 01:17:38 Jail is like like a holding cell. It's a police station or something. That's where they hold you before you get a court, where you get like your sentence or like if you're guilty or innocent. Oh. And then that's the sentence that you get when you're like when. Hey Daddy! Speaker 7 01:18:22 What's The age that you usually see like kids in juvie? Like fifteen, sixteen. Speaker 3 01:18:41 Juvie Is juvenile hall. Is juvie a short for juvenile hall or juveniles? With his kids. So it means you're too young, you're not an adult yet. We shouldn't kid you. That's for me. Was it easier than normal prison? Kinda. Yeah, but they're they're like not as hard on you, but they're pretty hard on you. It's like a hard for a kid. What's for kids? Ooh! Speaker 8 01:19:18 I just stayed back and seen it. [AI_SUMMARY] No content