Wroclaw · April 17, 2026 · 10:00-13:30
Second edition of ClawCamp in Wroclaw — new topics, new speakers, same format: half a day of practical knowledge about OpenClaw and AI agents.
April 17, 2026, 10:00-13:30 — All times in CET.
Between March 1 and April 13, 2026, OpenClaw shipped over 20 stable releases — with around 380 new improvements and close to 1,700 bug fixes. Among others: the Active Memory plugin, which auto-pulls relevant context from memory before every reply; Dreaming — a three-phase system (light/deep/REM) that consolidates short-term conversations into durable memory in the background; and Flows — a single control plane for ACP, subagents, cron, and detached CLI runs. In this talk you'll learn more about changes that meaningfully improve how OpenClaw works — and you'll be able to apply them to your own instance right away.
OpenClaw has roughly 500,000 instances online and over 211,000 GitHub stars — but documented enterprise deployments with hard numbers are rare. We combed through case studies, Reddit AMAs, LinkedIn, and Hacker News and collected more than a dozen real stories. As a taste, two of them: a business process outsourcing company with 300+ employees — workflow generation cut from 60 min to 30 seconds; and a small tech startup (a dozen or so people) with a Slack-based assistant — 58% inbox triage reduction and $70K in annual savings. In the talk we'll show more deployments, cover frank Reddit voices on what hurts — and you'll learn what a production OpenClaw deployment in a company actually takes, and which of these patterns you can apply in your own setup.
Have experience with OpenClaw or similar agentic systems? You don't need to be an expert — if you've deployed, tested, or solved a real problem, your knowledge is valuable. Submit a session, tell your story, and show the world what you've built. We record and publish all talks — it's a great opportunity to reach a wider audience.
Submission deadline: Coming soon — stay tuned
Submit your session →Wroclaw — the vibrant tech hub of Lower Silesia. Home to hundreds of IT companies, four major universities, and a thriving open-source community. Easy to reach by plane (WRO airport), train, or car.