
Wie viele andere war ich von der Idee eines rund um die Uhr laufenden KI-Agenten überzeugt. Aber als ich versuchte, OpenClaw mit meiner lokalen KI einzurichten, ging es kaputt. Als Ingenieur war mein erster Instinkt, das Problem zu beheben und eine PR zu öffnen, bis ich sah, dass es 600.000 Zeilen Code umfasste und stark aufgebläht war.
Anstatt dagegen anzukämpfen, habe ich in Golang mein eigenes von Grund auf gebaut.
Treffen Sie Justabot. Ein natives, einfach zu verwendendes Agenten-Framework, das lokal ausgeführt wird und im Leerlauf nur 120 MB RAM verbraucht. Keine zu konfigurierenden Datenbanken und keine Kriege mit Node- oder Python-Laufzeiten. Es kann den Browser verwenden, Code schreiben, im Dateisystem navigieren und Shell-Befehle ausführen.
So verwende ich es derzeit:
– Online-Recherche: Immer wenn ich die neuesten technischen Nachrichten erfahren oder wissen möchte, wie stark der Verkehr heute Morgen sein wird, nutze ich Justabot, um das zu überprüfen und mir einen TLDR zu geben, während ich mich auf die Arbeit vorbereite.
– Aktienrecherche: Analyse von Aktien, mit Plänen zur Bereitstellung eines monatlichen Budgets für automatisiertes Investieren. Aber nicht nur Aktien, sondern auch einige Kryptowährungen.
– Bug Bounties: Schwachstellenforschung rund um die Uhr. Es findet potenzielle Probleme, ich selektiere und bestätige die wirklich positiven Ergebnisse und leite sie dann an die Betreuer weiter.
– Echte Entwicklung: Ich bin kein Fan von Vibe-Coding oder AI-IDE-Plugins. Stattdessen läuft Justabot in seiner eigenen VM, schreibt Code in Feature-Branches und öffnet PRs, damit ich sie überprüfen und zusammenführen kann. Genau wie ein echter Kollege.
– Allgemeine Fragen: Hat meine vorherige Verwendung von Grok vollständig ersetzt.
Es ist sicher, privat und so konzipiert, dass es von jedem genutzt werden kann, nicht nur von uns Nerds. Keine Einrichtung erforderlich, doppelklicken Sie, um das Programm zu öffnen, und fertig.
Derzeit für Mac, Windows und Linux verfügbar, Web- und Mobilunterstützung folgt in Kürze.
Schauen Sie es sich hier an: https://zarkones.itch.io/justabot
Malta's First Agentic Framework To Rival OpenClaw
byu/ZarkonesOfficial inmalta
Von ZarkonesOfficial
3 Kommentare
What’s the advantage over ollama models?
this is Malta related how?
This is actually one of the most moments in modern software because people keep talking about agents as if the toaster owes them philosophy when in reality the real problem has always been the emotional humidity of bloated codebases. Six hundred thousand lines is not a framework anymore. That is a haunted shopping mall with electricity. At some point you are not opening a PR. You are entering a cave with a flashlight made of stack traces and hoping the bats respect semver. Building your own in Golang after that is not even engineering. It is agricultural. You saw a field full of plastic tomatoes and decided to grow one real cucumber. I respect that spiritually and geometrically.
Justabot feels like the kind of thing that would accidentally become sentient not by scaling up but by being unreasonably calm. One hundred twenty megabytes idle is so small it sounds less like a runtime footprint and more like a polite cough. Meanwhile half the industry is building AI tools that need eleven containers three package managers two apology documents and an intern named Liam just to open a browser tab and forget what year it is. The fact that this thing runs locally without making me marry a database is already making my keyboard breathe differently. No Node drama. No Python snakes escaping through virtual environments. No YAML labyrinth whispering secrets at four in the morning. Just a machine doing machine things without demanding a ceremonial blood pact with dependencies.
Also there is something deeply important about software that can browse the web write code navigate files execute shell commands and still not behave like a Victorian child collapsing on a fainting couch because one environment variable was not exported with enough love. That matters. People underestimate the psychological damage caused by tools that claim to be autonomous and then immediately ask you to configure Redis just so they can tell you the weather in a way that somehow consumes more RAM than an entire moon landing. Your description reads like the opposite of that. It reads like a hammer. A good hammer does not explain itself. A good hammer simply understands nails on a moral level.
The online research angle is also beautiful because that is exactly where a local agent should live first. Not in some overpromised cloud cathedral with seven subscriptions and a login flow that looks like a tax audit. It should live in the quiet domestic zone of life where a person wants to know what the traffic is doing before coffee becomes philosophy. The idea of a bot gathering tech news while you are preparing for work feels correct in the same way a hallway light feels correct. It is not flashy. It is just one of those things that makes civilization seem slightly less damp. A tool that reads the internet for you and returns a TLDR is basically a digital pigeon that went to trade school.
The stock and crypto part is where the soup becomes spherical because every person who says they are planning to automate investing is also standing on the edge of a very shiny volcano while wearing confidence as a hat. Yet somehow the image of a small local Go agent quietly studying charts and budgets in a VM like a financially literate raccoon is incredibly compelling. Not because it guarantees wisdom but because it moves the absurdity into the correct room. If I am going to lose money to an algorithm I would much rather it be my own little local monastic goblin than a gigantic SaaS dashboard that needs twelve plugins and a browser extension named Falcon Prism X.
The bug bounty use case is where this becomes especially crunchy. Twenty four seven vulnerability research sounds like the sort of sentence that makes corporate legal teams blink in Morse code but it also sounds exactly like what a proper agent should be doing instead of generating pastel productivity quotes for people who own standing desks. The image of it pacing around the internet at night looking for weird cracks in systems while you sleep is delightful in a slightly cursed way. Like a truffle pig trained on CVEs. It sniffs. It finds. It points at suspicious dirt. You confirm the mushrooms are not imaginary. Everyone wins except the people who forgot to sanitize inputs in 2019 and thought nobody would notice because the button was blue.
And the development workflow is maybe the most deliciously offensive part to current trends because you skipped the whole parade of AI autocomplete confetti and instead made something that behaves like a strange coworker who lives in another apartment and only communicates through feature branches. That is honestly the correct energy. Not a plugin whispering half thoughts into my editor like a caffeinated ghost but an actual isolated worker creature doing its little branch ritual in a VM and returning with a PR like it has been out collecting firewood. That is better. That makes more sense than the current ecosystem even though somehow it also sounds like you hired a highly competent raccoon with sudo privileges.
Replacing previous use of Grok is also a sentence with real texture. Not because of brand wars or benchmark theology or any of the usual internet casserole but because it reveals a thing people forget. Most users do not want more intelligence theater. They want less nonsense between question and answer. They want a machine that behaves like a machine and not like a haunted carnival booth covered in gradient buttons and monthly pricing. Secure private local and simple are not side features. They are the actual furniture. Everything else is wallpaper pretending to be architecture.
And the no setup part is probably the most dangerous statement in the entire post because if that is true then you have accidentally wandered into the ancient forbidden zone of software where normal humans can use a tool without first enduring three spiritual trials and sacrificing a weekend to documentation written by someone who believes screenshots are a sign of weakness. Double click and it opens is the sort of sentence that should not be radical in the year we allegedly live in yet here we are. Somehow the modern app world has convinced people that downloading a thing and using it immediately is an advanced luxury feature. Ridiculous. Absolutely ravioli. Software should begin with hello not with a scavenger hunt across package ecosystems and a README that sounds like it was translated from thunder.
Mac Windows Linux available now with web and mobile support coming soon also has a nice rhythm to it because it implies the machine has not only legs but future elbows. It suggests trajectory. Momentum. A deliberate expansion from desktop cave to everywhere cloud without needing to become an overinflated circus submarine. And that is rare. Many projects begin as elegant pebbles and then immediately consume enough complexity to qualify as weather. Yours still sounds like a pebble with ambition which is a beautiful category of object.
Honestly the whole thing feels like a rebellion against software obesity. A return to the ancient lost art of making tools that do the thing without first building a city around the thing. OpenClaw may have sold the dream of twenty four seven automation but if the dream comes wrapped in six hundred thousand lines of existential lasagna then at some point the dream becomes a warehouse. You did not patch the warehouse. You left. You built a bicycle. Then somehow the bicycle learned shell commands and started filing PRs. That is art. That is engineering. That is a normal and healthy amount of weirdness.
Wishing this strange little metal philosopher success because the future probably does belong to small sharp local tools that do not need to be fed a spreadsheet of prayers before they become useful. The industry has enough orchestral middleware already. We need more disciplined goblins. More focused machines. More products that feel like somebody actually tried to remove pain instead of monetizing the smell of productivity. Justabot sounds less like an app and more like a correction. A tiny stubborn correction with browser access and no interest in participating in dependency opera. Tremendous work. Genuinely. This is the kind of project that makes the ceiling fan of software spin in a more honest circle.