50% Abandon OpenClaw for Hermes

OpenClaw is the Telnet of today. Using it is a terrible idea. Kilo is celebrating rapid migration of OpenClaw users to Hermes. 50% already have made a switch.

~35% stick with OpenClaw despite its flaws, citing unmatched integrations and the largest skill ecosystem

~30% have switched to Hermes, praising easier setup and better memory defaults

~20% use both tools together, running OpenClaw as the orchestrator and Hermes as an execution specialist

To be fair, that’s a 30% abandonment rate given 20% still are in transition. Kilo explains that the competition is architectural.

Feature checklists make these tools look nearly identical. The real divergence is architectural, and it shapes everything downstream.

Here’s the buried lede. It’s the vibe coded bugs of low quality.

“Every single update ships more bugs and more problems than before… there’s a difference between ‘beta’ and ‘this literally cannot handle real use cases.’

“Every new update has a ~25% chance of breaking response delivery for heartbeat messages, cron jobs, and web hooks.”

“I went 7 days without being able to use OpenClaw with my provider because it flat out broke the integration.”

Security is barely mentioned, despite OpenClaw clearly being the worst software ever made in history.

I’ve never seen so many CVEs, ever. What the comments above reflect is that OpenClaw gets worse when it tries to close the hundreds of flaws that it just introduced. Apparently software engineers can release something that isn’t even engineered. OpenClaw was developed like a kid with a butter knife called himself a brain surgeon.

Cost is another surprise factor, although it is an external risk shared by both.

The root cause is well understood: every message sends the full conversation history to the API, so costs compound within a session. Users who don’t aggressively manage conversation resets see costs spiral.

The community’s solution is a shift toward flat-rate subscriptions and cheaper models. MiniMax at $10-20/month, Ollama Pro Cloud at $20/month, and free models like Qwen 3.5 via OpenRouter are rapidly replacing per-token API billing as the default.

…Anthropic’s account bans are pushing users away. Multiple users report being banned despite spending thousands on the API.

Ravens Can Predict Wolf Kills

Scientists say they are surprised, while also saying it’s simply logical that ravens remember where to find food.

Researchers found that wolf kills often clustered in certain parts of the landscape, especially flat valley bottoms where wolves hunt more successfully. Ravens visited these areas much more often than places where kills rarely happened. This suggests the birds learn and remember long-term feeding patterns across the environment.

“We already knew that ravens can remember stable food sources, like landfills,” says Loretto. “What surprised us is that they also seem to learn in which areas wolf kills are more common. A single kill is unpredictable, but over time some parts of the landscape are more productive than others — and ravens appear to use that pattern to their advantage.”

Datacenter Sprawl Pushes Georgia Into Dangerous Waters

Georgia residents, noticing water pressure problems, forced an investigation that uncovered a huge liability.

When the county utility investigated, officials discovered two industrial-scale water hookups feeding a data center campus located 20 miles south of downtown Atlanta. One water connection had been installed without the utility’s knowledge, and the other was not linked to the company’s account and therefore wasn’t being billed.

All told, the developer, Quality Technology Services, owed nearly $150,000 for using more than 29 million gallons of unaccounted-for water. That is equivalent to 44 Olympic-size swimming pools and far exceeds the peak limit agreed to during the data center planning process.

Georgia is home to more than 200 data center facilities and their thirst for water is turning into a political flashpoint. The entire state is experiencing moderate to high levels of drought, and Gov. Brian Kemp declared a state of emergency last month in response to one of Georgia’s worst wildfire outbreaks in years.

The datacenter design is impactful in the worst ways. It doesn’t have to be like this, but apparently there is not yet enough regulation to force innovation.

Get Your Anthropic Mythos Novelty Pin

Every day this week, in meeting after meeting with CISOs and their security teams, I was asked to prep them for board meetings on Anthropic Mythos. Novel? No, just read the cards. It’s a sad case of a vendor spreading breathless hyperbole while the facts tell a very different story.

It is exactly the sort of thing that calls for a challenge coin commemorative pin. For everyone holding the line on common sense, or who wants to: