ClawHuddle – Self-hosted OpenClaw management for teams
Turns 60-minute-per-person OpenClaw setup into a 2-minute invite, but only solves for one framework.

Full SSH root access on managed OpenClaw hosting beats black-box alternatives.
Developers running OpenClaw who want to avoid DevOps overhead
Render · Elestio · Heroku
I built TryMyClaw after spending way too long trying to self-host OpenClaw. Docker port conflicts, Python version hell, nginx configs — you know the drill.
The managed hosting options out there are black boxes: no SSH, no custom plugins, can't inspect your own data.
TryMyClaw is different: you get a dedicated server, full root access, and bring your own API keys (OpenAI, Anthropic, whatever). No token markups, no vendor lock-in.
What you get:
• Full SSH & root access to your instance • Bring your own API keys — no middlemen • Multi-channel: Telegram, WhatsApp, Slack, Discord • Install any community plugin or build your own • Auto-updates & daily encrypted backups
Starter is $19/mo. Deploy in ~5 minutes.
Happy to answer questions about the setup, the stack, or why I think "managed + full control" is actually possible.
Turns 60-minute-per-person OpenClaw setup into a 2-minute invite, but only solves for one framework.
Per-agent container isolation with separate networks beats shared-instance chaos.
Vercel for OpenClaw agents: multi-tenant dashboards and billing for scaling agencies.
Paid wrapper around open-source OpenClaw that charges for Docker management and API access.
Yet another SSH SSO tool competing with Teleport and Smallstep without clear differentiation.
Nice, no-fluff onboarding: step-by-step Slack app setup, enabling Socket Mode (so you avoid public webhook URLs), and clear instructions for grabbing xoxb/xapp tokens — everything you actually need to get an OpenClaw bot running. The hosting add-on that manages ENV, agent state, Telegram+Slack on one instance and CLI auth is the practical win here for people who want to skip deployment headaches. It isn't groundbreaking, but it's a tidy, useful play for a narrow but real audience.