James Dooley: Is Open Claw needed? It is a big question that I get asked quite a lot. So many people seem to jump on the bandwagon of Open Claw, and I try to take a step back and say, you know what, I am going to leave it for a month or two and I am going to ask the experts who do a lot of split testing and know what works best on the different LLMs. Well, here I am today. I am joined with Dennis Yu, who does all of the split testing, whether it is ChatGPT, Claude for Chrome, Perplexity and many others. So let us dive straight in. Dennis Yu, in your opinion, is Open Claw needed? Dennis Yu: If you are like 99 per cent of everyone else, you do not need to. When Claudebot, which is what it first came out as before they got sued by Anthropic and before they were basically bought by ChatGPT, came out, I spent 40 hours straight programming, writing Python scripts and setting up a Mac Mini. I set up a virtual cluster inside AWS. I did all these different things. I trained up the skills, and it was really cool. But then what happens, and ask anybody who has actually spent at least 40 or 50 hours messing around with it, is that you spend so much time in configuration because it keeps improving and they keep launching new skills, but then the skills have back doors that have viruses in them, and then you encounter certain hardware issues. The very thing that the system is supposed to do, which is save you time and allow you to be a manager, actually ends up causing you to become tech support, managing your team of agents that are doing stuff that is not even in your control. The head of security at Meta installed the thing and then it went out of control. She had to run to her Mac Mini and unplug it because it would not listen to her. This is what you get with open source. There is not a company behind it. You become a hardware engineer. Fine, you do not have to pay tokens because you are doing it on your machine. But when you have a real GPU that can do real inference in the cloud, that is a different story. If you are doing small little tasks, fine, set up an Open Claw on a Mac Mini. There are ways to containerise it and lock it down so you can control what it has access to. But if you are doing real work, like for clients, and if you are doing SEO where things are chained together and the work requires sustained effort, has a knowledge base and requires access to different tools, systems and other people, this Open Claw thing is a disaster. If you are in poverty, no offence to any of my friends in second world and third world countries, fine, go do that. But if you are in a first world country and you can afford the $200 a month, it is worth your time. James Dooley: So, on the $200 a month, are you then saying that is for Claude? Is that what you are saying? Dennis Yu: That is for Claude, the 20x Pro account, or get Perplexity for the $200 a month Pro account, which gives you 45,000 credits. Arguably, there is a loophole right now, but if you hit Opus 4.6 in Perplexity Max, you can basically get five or ten times the amount of even what Claude is giving you, which they are losing money on like crazy too. So I do not see how any of these companies are making money. James Dooley: Yes, for sure. I mean, I love your example. When we were off air before, you were talking about how people can go and buy a car engine and then try to build the car, but then you are becoming an auto mechanic and then you have got to build it all and deal with it all and deal with all the potential issues, where you could just go and buy the car and have it working, and then if there are some problems, you can go and get it serviced with the actual mechanics. Surely the whole reason for these people wanting to move to AI is to save time and, like you said, if anything it is taking more time up. You become your own tech support and it just seems a hassle. It is almost like we have moved everything over to G Suite on email because we do not want to have email support, and it just makes it so much easier. I feel like you have taken a step back, from what you have explained to me, by using Open Claw to save a little bit of money but then taking on all the headaches of the support that is needed. It just seems crazy. But can you explain to one or two people about Dispatch within Claude and why, now that this is here, Open Claw is not needed if you are using Dispatch with Claude? Dennis Yu: Yes. So Dispatch, which is right here on the Claude app in iOS or Android, allows me to use my phone as a walkie-talkie to control all the other projects I have here. So I can control my computer. I have a Mac, but you could do the same thing on Windows, where you can set it so that it never sleeps, which means it has to be plugged in and have solid Wi-Fi and that kind of thing. So while I am sleeping or while I am having lunch or whatever, all these agents are working and I am able to talk to my agent and say, go do this and go do that. It is controlling my computer, which sounds weird, but it certainly makes sense that I do not want to always be sitting there. If I am sitting down and it is the beginning of a project and I am thinking about something, yes, I want to be in front of a laptop and do some planning for a few minutes, but then when it is out doing the work, the agent comes back to me and I can say, it will say, oh, I did this one thing, do you want to keep going? Yes, keep going. I do not need to be in front of my desktop to do that. So anyone who is using Dispatch knows the whole point of orchestration, or all the layers on top of the engine, is now being solved. Obviously Google, Grok and Claude all know this. They are not dumb. So any time something new comes out, just give them a couple of weeks and you will see all the other guys catch up. That is what happens every single time. So unless you are on the bleeding edge and you have to be the very first person, do not go jumping for the latest thing. Decide what your competitive advantage is and just double down on whatever your advantage is. James Dooley: Yes, for sure. So anyone who is watching this, it was mainly for the people that keep asking me, should I be signing up for Open Claw? In my opinion, speaking to Dennis Yu, who does a lot of split testing, no, you should not. You can end up getting a lot of shiny object syndrome and jumping from one LLM to the other. But do make certain you check out one or two of the links in the description. I get Dennis Yu on five or six different videos where we are talking about the different LLMs, like what is better with ChatGPT, Claude and Perplexity, what the best value is, and why you potentially should be using Claude for Chrome. Dennis Yu, it has been an absolute pleasure, and hopefully people like the video on whether Open Claw is worth it. I hope we saved a lot of people a lot of headache.