Agents are the entry point, and skills are the app.


Therefore, there are several directions that must be explored.
The first is the Agents entry point. Agents must have versatility. Currently, OpenClaw has a high probability of dominating the market, but it’s very likely that some large internet companies will customize and modify it, making it compatible with OpenClaw, but with a much better user experience.
The second is Skills. The app with the best user experience will attract more users. The same applies to Skills—how to better package your business processes into Skills? This is a question every service provider must consider. It’s not just about usability, but also an engineering challenge that balances user experience.
The third is creating an AI version of an App Store—Skills Store. Getting good rankings and revenue sharing is very important. Of course, it’s also possible that this could be replaced by a single Skills. I’ve already seen this Skills. It’s a bit of a throwback to the traditional Web 1.0 portal website era.
The fourth is effective information push. In the AI era, generating work and information is no longer a problem. But people are inherently lazy, and information needs to be fed directly to them. When developing Skills, you must consider advertising effects and viral growth effects. This is not fundamentally different from the internet era.
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