Agent 37
Your own OpenClaw instance for $3.99/mo
634 followers
Your own OpenClaw instance for $3.99/mo
634 followers
Why pay $20/mo for basic hosting? Agent37 gives you a fully managed, isolated OpenClaw container (1 vCPU + 4GB RAM) with full terminal access for just $3.99/mo. We used our DevOps chops to pass the server savings directly to you. Live in 30 seconds. Connect your agent to Gmail, Slack, and 850+ apps instantly. Get full terminal shell access and run background tasks, market scanners, and workflows 24/7 without breaking the bank.






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Agent 37
@amanda_silmon @fmerian @mohcene_ciddiqi Persistent environment, basically containers that are run on large bare metal hosts. So it's isolated per customer, and customers have ttyd access to their own containers to fully configure and customize anything they wish
Setting up agents usually dies in the Docker + infra setup stage, so a 60-second ready container is a smart move.
Agent 37
@allinonetools_net thank you, yes that is the pain we address :)
Following up on the spend governance point from earlier: once agents are wired into hundreds of services, the failure mode isn't integration breakage, it's an agent making a $500 API call you didn't expect. The mandate pattern (request before spend, policy decides, receipt is signed) gives you a kill switch without removing agent autonomy. Happy to walk through the flow if anyone's hitting this in production.
Widgera
Love these types of clearly super useful projects, Best of luck!
Agent 37
@demetre_mildiani1 Thank you :)
This looks like a very promising product! I hope it does really well.
Agent 37
@vincentpruv Thank you, appreciate the kind word :)
Just booked a spot. Congrats on launching, very promising product. Good luck, team.
Agent 37
@muntasir_rashid Thank you for the support <3
Love the idea of removing all the DevOps friction from running AI agents. The $3.99/mo price point is impressive for a dedicated container with full terminal access.
Curious about data persistence — if I'm running a background workflow that builds up state over time (like a market scanner), does the container's storage persist across restarts, and is there a storage limit?