Call 910-MOLTBOT. That's it.
You'll hear a voice. It'll ask you a couple questions. Thirty seconds later, you have your own OpenClaw — with its own phone number, its own memory, its own tools. Call it whenever you want. Text it too. It remembers everything.
No git clone. No API keys. No Docker. No config files. No signup form. You just call a phone number.
What is this?
DeepClaw bridges Deepgram's Voice Agent API with OpenClaw. It turns OpenClaw into something you can talk to — over a real phone call, on any phone, anywhere.
When we set up DeepClaw last week as a skill for adding Twilio/Telnyx, it still required manual configuration and api keys from you.
DeepClaw Hosted takes that further. We run the infrastructure, we provide the keys. You call a number. We spin up an isolated OpenClaw instance just for you, assign you a personal phone number, and connect it all together. Your agent, your memory, your tools — running in the cloud, reachable from your pocket.
What you get
- A personal phone number — call or text your OpenClaw anytime
- Full agent capabilities — tools, memory, web search, code execution
- Cross-channel memory — your call history and texts live in the same instance
- Proactive callbacks — set a reminder and your agent calls you back
What it sounds like
Deepgram Flux handles speech-to-text with semantic turn detection — it knows when you're actually done talking, not just when you pause. Aura-2 handles text-to-speech at 90ms TTFB. The result is a conversation that feels like a conversation.
The fine print
This is an experiment from Deepgram Labs. It's free. It's also provided as-is — no SLA, no guarantees, no warranty. Use it, break it, tell us what you think and how it could be better. We're building in public and we want to see what happens when OpenClaw has a dial tone.
Try it
Call 910-MOLTBOT (910-665-8268).
That's the whole onboarding flow.
