I tried letting OctoClaw run a small workflow last week.
At first, I thought it would be like most “AI agents” out there.
You know suggest a few opportunities, analyze some data, then wait for me to click confirm.
But there was one moment that felt different.
I set up a simple flow: monitor price spreads between two DEXs, automatically bridge to the cheaper chain, and execute if the spread was large enough. Then I shut my laptop and went to sleep.
The next morning, I opened my wallet history and saw that several transactions had already been executed during the night.
Not a demo.
Not a backtest.
Real transactions.
That feeling was strange.
For years, we’ve been used to AI standing next to us as an “advisor.” It gives information, but humans still make the final move.
But OctoClaw gave me a different feeling. It no longer sits outside the workflow. It starts operating inside the workflow itself.
It may sound like a small shift, but I think this is why more people are paying attention to AI agents lately.
Not because AI can answer questions better.
But because, for the first time, AI is starting to interact with on-chain environments on behalf of humans.
And once you experience waking up and seeing an agent actively operating while you were asleep… it becomes very hard to see AI as just another chatbot anymore.
@OpenLedger $OPEN #OpenLedger $ETH

