How OpenClaw Turned Mac Mini Into the Most In-Demand AI Hardware
In recent months, the Apple Mac mini has gone from a $599 desktop that few noticed to one of the hottest AI devices on the planet. The driving force behind this surge is OpenClaw, an open-source AI agent platform backed by OpenAI. By leveraging Apple's unified memory architecture, it has made Mac systems the default choice for running large local AI models. Apple CEO Tim Cook warned that supply shortages for Mac mini and Mac Studio could last "months" as AI-driven demand far exceeds the company's expectations.
OpenClaw Sparks AI Demand, Mac Mini Supply Runs Low
The open-source AI agent platform OpenClaw (now backed by OpenAI) has unexpectedly turned Apple's Mac lineup into the center of AI hardware demand. According to Decrypt, the previously overlooked $599 Mac mini desktop has become one of the hottest AI hardware devices globally. Apple CEO Tim Cook warns that AI-driven demand has far exceeded expectations, and supply shortages for both the Mac mini and Mac Studio could persist.
AI Enters the Physical World: Hangzhou Startup Launches $43 Voice-Controlled Device
Artificial intelligence is rapidly moving from the cloud into real-world devices. According to CNBC, Hangzhou-based startup EinClaw has started shipping its first hardware product—a clip-on microphone priced at just $43. Users can send voice commands to the OpenClaw AI agent for real-time interaction. The first 100 units were shipped last Friday, marking a new milestone in how Chinese AI startups are blending software with hardware.
AI Moves Off the Cloud: Chinese Startup Ships $43 Clip-On Microphone for Voice-Controlled AI Agents
AI is rapidly transitioning from the cloud to the physical world, creating new hardware-software hybrids. According to CNBC, Hangzhou-based startup EinClaw has shipped its first 100 clip-on microphones for just $43 each. Users wear the device and control the OpenClaw AI agent via voice commands for queries and tasks. This startup, originally focused on cloud data system development, this.
AI Enters the Physical World: A $43 Voice Device Hits the Market
A Hangzhou-based startup, EinClaw, has launched a clip-on microphone priced at just $43, allowing users to send voice commands to an OpenClaw AI agent. With the first 100 units already shipped, this marks another step in China’s accelerating trend of bringing AI out of the cloud and into physical devices—a shift that could reshape how factories and global automakers adopt AI.
