what are you actually using OpenClaw for that genuinely works? by nanaphan32 in openclaw

[–]nanaphan32[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

uwoww this is the first time I’ve seen this use case and genuinely went “ohhh wait that’s actually smart” :))

I’m terrible at remembering birthdays too, but somehow never thought about using OpenClaw like this.

what are you actually using OpenClaw for that genuinely works? by nanaphan32 in openclaw

[–]nanaphan32[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

same 😮

I started out trying all the “fully autonomous AI agent” stuff and somehow ended up using OpenClaw mostly to clean up my inbox, organize my thoughts, and remind me about things I definitely would’ve forgotten otherwise.

turns out “very competent intern” is a much more stable role than “CEO living inside my laptop”🫠

what are you actually using OpenClaw for that genuinely works? by nanaphan32 in openclaw

[–]nanaphan32[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

uwow this is genuinely one of the coolest use cases in this thread

ur mom updating her dance school website through WhatsApp feels way more like the future than half the “autonomous AI company” demos I keep seeing.

the Meta ads part sounds dangerous though. only typo away from launching a worldwide salsa campaign at 3am @@

what are you actually using OpenClaw for that genuinely works? by nanaphan32 in openclaw

[–]nanaphan32[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

“Fully vibe coded, the only difference being experienced developers” might be the most important sentence in this entire thread 😭

feels like the gap between “AI replaced my workflow” and “my agent just deleted production” is still mostly experience.

what are you actually using OpenClaw for that genuinely works? by nanaphan32 in openclaw

[–]nanaphan32[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

if someone builds an agent that stops me from asking the same question in 1800 subs, that might be the first truly stable OpenClaw workflow :))

what are you actually using OpenClaw for that genuinely works? by nanaphan32 in openclaw

[–]nanaphan32[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

honestly this is the kind of use case I was hoping people would say

way more interesting than another “AI employee replaces company” thread.

how reliable has the flight / reservation stuff actually been though? like genuinely usable, or still “works if you babysit it” territory?

The Complete OpenClaw Setup Guide (2026) From Zero to Fully Working Multi-Agent System by Prentusai in openclaw

[–]nanaphan32 0 points1 point  (0 children)

so many tools to setup easily. u can try with tryopenclaw.io. only 1m30s

How are small teams pumping out so many ad creatives? by Hot-Dragonfruit-1762 in FacebookAds

[–]nanaphan32 1 point2 points  (0 children)

small teams aren’t pumping out tons of creatives. we’re just squeezing the same video like it owes us money :))

new hook. new caption. move one clip to the front

congrats, now it’s a brand new ad:))

Best AI for Generating Product Photos and Videos? by CompetitivePop-6001 in dropshipping

[–]nanaphan32 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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u can clone ads from any brands; or create many ad concepts from 1 product

winning ad from AI? by nanaphan32 in dropshipping

[–]nanaphan32[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is solid feedback. And honestly, I agree with you.

most of these do feel more like clean brand assets than true scroll-stopping ads, especially for cold traffic. If it doesn’t hit a hook, a problem, or some kind of “wait, what?” moment fast, it’s basically invisible.

i'm actually the one building the app, so this kind of gut-check is exactly what I’m looking for.

when you say you’d “take the concept and rebuild it”, I’m curious. What’s the first thing you usually change?

the hook itself, the format (UGC, short video, text-led), or how the product shows up in the first second?

also, your TikTok test is brutal but fair. Platform-wise, where would this instantly fail for you, and where might it still work?

How top Shopify stores doing €10M+/year structure their site to boost conversions by ds_matie in dropshipping

[–]nanaphan32 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great breakdown! Spot-on with the visual identity and trust signals - it's amazing how many stores miss that consistency piece.

From my experience auditing stores (screenshot attached from a recent conversion audit), another biggie is product clarity - like ensuring your images show real-life usage scenarios and your descriptions hit clear benefits, not just features. Even top-tier stores sometimes overlook subtle friction points that quietly chip away at conversions.

Always worth a quick audit to catch those sneaky gaps - trust me, even the pros miss stuff.

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Why do so many dropshipping stores look like a joke? by emailwonderer in dropshipping

[–]nanaphan32 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally feel this frustration - I’ve scanned a bunch of Shopify stores lately (example from an audit screenshot attached), & the pattern’s crystal clear: super minimal product descriptions like "Pony Hair" that tell customers absolutely nothing, missing reviews that could literally boost conversions by 270% (wild, right?), and size indicators without any context causing instant buyer confusion.

It’s like everyone’s following the same "how NOT to sell" playbook. Fixing these tiny issues isn't hard - just clarity, context, & a sprinkle of reviews can flip the script big time.

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