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    <title>openclaw on Fabian G. Williams</title>
    <link>https://www.fabswill.com/tags/openclaw/</link>
    <description>Recent content in openclaw on Fabian G. Williams</description>
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    <lastBuildDate>Sun, 07 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
    
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      <title>Your Agent Said It Did the Work. I Checked the Disk.</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/your-agent-said-it-did-the-work/</link>
      <pubDate>Sun, 07 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/your-agent-said-it-did-the-work/</guid>
      <description>Every morning one of my agents sends me a clean status report. Posts cross-posted. Messages delivered. Contacts processed. For a while I read those reports the way you read a receipt from a cashier you trust. Then the automation started giving me time back, so I sat down to run a retrospective and checked the reports against what was actually on disk. The trust did not survive contact with the evidence.</description>
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      <title>Sense Before Act: Four Artifacts Every Agent Iteration Must Produce Before It Decides</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/sense-before-act-four-artifacts-every-agent-iteration/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/sense-before-act-four-artifacts-every-agent-iteration/</guid>
      <description>By the end of this post you will know what every iteration of every production agent must produce BEFORE it decides anything: four small artifacts that catch the failures sharper prompts cannot prevent. You will know why &amp;ldquo;tell the model to be careful&amp;rdquo; never worked as a defense, and why the only durable fix is structural. And you will know what the discipline looks like in code, because we have been running it at MACONA for months and the receipts are public.</description>
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      <title>The AI Agent Fleet Works. The Trust Funnel Does Not.</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/autonomous-ai-agent-fleet-nonprofit-w19-retro-corrections-panel/</link>
      <pubDate>Mon, 11 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/autonomous-ai-agent-fleet-nonprofit-w19-retro-corrections-panel/</guid>
      <description>TL;DR I volunteer with MACONA, a 501&amp;copy;(3) nonprofit that ships food, medicine, feminine hygiene products, donated computers, and clothing to communities and schools in West Africa. For a few few monthis now I have run a small autonomous AI agent fleet for the organization: five named agents, cron-driven, running through OpenClaw on a simple Windows box.
Week 19 (I track progress via week numbers for me and my Agents) looked like a win on every internal activity metric: 17 reliability PRs merged, 2 awareness-day blog posts published, 1 Brevo campaign queued, and 37 cold introduction emails sent.</description>
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    <item>
      <title>Replacing gpt-oss:120b With Qwen3.6 on a MacBook Pro: A Two-Day Local Model Benchmark</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/replacing-gpt-oss-with-qwen3-6-on-macbook-pro/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/replacing-gpt-oss-with-qwen3-6-on-macbook-pro/</guid>
      <description>TL;DR I spent two days benchmarking three Qwen3.6 variants against gpt-oss:120b on my MacBook Pro M3 Max. The shocking result: a 21 GB coding-tuned model ran an OpenClaw-shaped research-brief workload that I use for the non profit MACONA.org in 6 seconds — 10x faster than gpt-oss:120b on the same prompt. Fast enough that I now have reasonable confidence I could move this kind of work off the SaaS-hosted frontier models I have been paying for and onto local hardware on my dev machine.</description>
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    <item>
      <title>I Run Five OpenClaw Agents for 72 Cents a Day</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/five-openclaw-agents-72-cents-per-day/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/five-openclaw-agents-72-cents-per-day/</guid>
      <description>TL;DR Five OpenClaw agents run the content and executive-assistant pipeline for MACONA — a nonprofit I volunteer with — at $0.72 a day. The most common support question on r/OpenClaw is &amp;ldquo;$25 in 9 hours, help.&amp;rdquo; The gap between those two numbers is three config decisions stacked on top of each other: heartbeat interval, model on the loop, and hours of operation. None of them are clever. All of them are usually set wrong by default.</description>
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      <title>PM Life as Agents Take on More</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/pm-life-as-agents-take-on-more/</link>
      <pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/pm-life-as-agents-take-on-more/</guid>
      <description>TL;DR I had a sidewalk conversation with two neighbors that turned into a real-time debate about AI replacing jobs. Then I watched a Nate video that gave me the exact framework to explain why all 3 were right — and wrong. One neighbor is a project manager already using AI daily. One is a business analyst who coaches companies. One of my neighbours&amp;rsquo; husband — a skeptic — is convinced AI cannot do creative work.</description>
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      <title>Your Brain Forgets Most of Your Life. So Does Your AI Agent.</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/your-brain-forgets-most-of-your-life-so-does-your-ai-agent/</link>
      <pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/your-brain-forgets-most-of-your-life-so-does-your-ai-agent/</guid>
      <description>TL;DR Neuroscientist Lisa Genova explains why forgetting is normal — your brain filters out most of your day, loses context when you change rooms, and is terrible at remembering future intentions. I watched her TED talk and realized I had already encountered every one of these failures in AI agents I build for real organizations. Here is how the parallels work, what breaks in production, and what I built to fix it.</description>
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      <title>How Do You Trust an Autonomous AI Agent? Evals Are the Answer.</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/how-do-you-trust-an-autonomous-ai-agent/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/how-do-you-trust-an-autonomous-ai-agent/</guid>
      <description>TL;DR I run an autonomous AI agent on a Mac Mini in my house. She handles 16 daily cron jobs — finances, email triage, outreach campaigns, device monitoring, morning briefings. The agent says &amp;ldquo;done.&amp;rdquo; But did it actually do anything? I built a 9-dimension eval rubric to find out. Along the way I discovered that my evals were broken, my agent was better than I thought, and the most important metric isn&amp;rsquo;t pass/fail — it&amp;rsquo;s whether a failure is your fault or the agent&amp;rsquo;s fault.</description>
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      <title>Your Next Hire Should Be an AI — Here&#39;s How a Nonprofit Did It in Two Weeks</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/your-next-hire-should-be-an-ai/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 17 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/your-next-hire-should-be-an-ai/</guid>
      <description>TL;DR We deployed an autonomous AI executive assistant for a nonprofit in under two weeks. She runs eight scheduled programs daily — morning briefings, social media, donor research, newsletter drafts, content scouting, and end-of-day digests — all without being asked. The CEO went from drowning in operational work to just making decisions. The same pattern works for any small organization: medical practices, restaurants, law firms, conferences, mom-and-pop shops.
 &amp;ldquo;The CEO&amp;rsquo;s time should be spent on decisions, not data entry.</description>
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      <title>Qui Non Proficit Deficit: Three Months Offline, Two Apps Shipped, and an AI That Runs a Nonprofit</title>
      <link>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/qui-non-proficit-deficit-im-back/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 07 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://www.fabswill.com/blog/qui-non-proficit-deficit-im-back/</guid>
      <description>TL;DR I went heads down for about three months — no LinkedIn, no YouTube, barely any Twitter. In that time I shipped two iOS apps to the App Store, built an autonomous AI assistant that runs a nonprofit&amp;rsquo;s entire digital presence 24&amp;frasl;7, and developed a workflow where AI agents scale my output 3-5x. This post is the full story: the career pattern that taught me to recognize seismic shifts, what I actually built, and why I&amp;rsquo;m back.</description>
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