China’s AI Accelerates into the Physical World: Hardware Innovation Becomes the New Frontier
Chinese startups are leading the shift of artificial intelligence from the cloud into real-world devices. As reported by CNBC, Hangzhou-based startup EinClaw recently delivered its first 100 units of a clip-on microphone priced at just $43, allowing users to control an AI agent called OpenClaw via voice commands. Previously focused on cloud data systems, the company’s move into hardware signals a new phase for AI-powered consumer products.
AI Goes Physical: How Chinese Hardware Startups Are Making Their Move
AI is moving from the cloud into the real world. Chinese startups are now building physical devices that let users interact with intelligent agents directly — and one Hangzhou-based company just shipped its first product for just $43. Discover how this trend is reshaping global tech partnerships.
OpenClaw AI Agents Integrate with VPN for Smarter Network Control
The field of network security has achieved a new breakthrough: Windscribe VPN software now natively integrates the OpenClaw AI agent platform, meaning AI assistants can directly manage and control virtual private network connections. According to CNET, this update allows users to deploy "agentic agents" within the VPN service, enabling automated network operations through natural language commands or preset rules. Windscribe has not only provided detailed OpenClaw
Windscribe VPN Adds Native Support for OpenClaw AI Agent – Control Your Connection with Natural Language
Windscribe VPN now natively integrates the OpenClaw AI agent, letting users manage VPN connections through simple natural language commands. First reported by CNET, this update marks the first time an AI agent has gained low-level access to VPN configuration. Windscribe has also published a detailed setup guide to help users enable OpenClaw skills.
OpenClaw AI Agents Gain VPN Access for Smarter Network Control
OpenClaw AI agents now integrate directly with Windscribe VPN, enabling natural language commands and automated scripts for fine‑grained network control. Users can switch regional nodes, enforce security policies, and trigger a kill switch on anomaly detection—all through AI‑driven automation.
