🦞 Peter Boosts Memory Plugin

Good Morning, OpenClaw Owners!
It’s the moment AI stops answering questions and starts running systems.
Peter Boosts Memory Plugin

TL;DR: Peter Steinberger pointed users of OpenClaw to the community plugin Lossless-Claw as a way to reduce agents forgetting context after compaction. Instead of deleting older messages when the context window fills, the plugin stores every interaction in SQLite and uses layered summaries so agents can search and reconstruct earlier conversations. Steinberger described it as an experimental community approach to improving long-term memory.
Tencent Backs OpenClaw After Clash

TL;DR: Peter Steinberger confirmed that Tencent has become a sponsor of OpenClaw, marking a shift after earlier tensions. The dispute began when Tencent was accused of scraping skills from ClawHub for its SkillHub platform without supporting the project. The new sponsorship, now listed on GitHub through Tencent Cloud.
OpenClaw Fixes Twitter Noise

TL;DR: Peter Steinberger shared that a cron job powered by OpenClaw now scans his X mentions every five minutes and automatically blocks spam, promo replies, and “reply-guy” noise. The AI filter significantly improves signal quality, letting him finally see meaningful replies again, though some users questioned potential false positives.
Plugin Push to Fix Memory Drift

TL;DR: A user urged developers to build a communication plugin for OpenClaw after a new before_prompt_build runtime hook exposed by OpenClaw contributors He argues most agents rarely use their semantic memory tools, causing repeated questions and drift. By injecting instructions before responses, a plugin could force memory retrieval and enforce communication rules. Peter Steinberger said the Lossless-Claw plugin can help reduce agents forgetting context after compaction, though the team plans to experiment with it further before making this behavior the default.
Customers Before OpenClaw

TL;DR: A user highlighted a key takeaway about making money with OpenClaw. Start by finding customers, then use AI agents to solve their problems. The post resonated because many developers still build tools first and hunt for users later, while the emerging agent economy may reward those who reverse the order—selling solutions before writing code.
OpenClaw Plugin System Expands

TL;DR: Peter Steinberger said he is redesigning the plugin architecture of OpenClaw to make plugins more powerful while keeping the core lightweight. He also plans to support plugin bundles compatible with Claude Code and Codex ecosystems. Developers welcomed the move, discussing bundle formats and distribution, while Steinberger emphasized keeping OpenClaw open-source rather than turning it into a paid marketplace.
Newbies Learn the Server Lesson

TL;DR: A user shared a viral story after helping a friend install OpenClaw. The friend complained the agent “stopped working,” which turned out to be simple: he had shut down his computer. The anecdote highlights a common beginner mistake—OpenClaw isn’t a cloud chatbot like ChatGPT but a locally/Vps running server process, so turning off the machine effectively shuts down the agent itself.
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