Show HN: DumbClaw, dumb and simple version of OpenClaw
The user wants a 4000-word summary of the news article. We don't have the full article text, only a short snippet. The snippet: "DumbClaw is a deliberately simple AI assistant bot the 'dumb' version of OpenClaw. No framework magic, no abstractions for the sake of it. Every feature lives in one readable file. If you want to add… [+2138 chars]". So it's likely a longer article about DumbClaw, an AI assistant. We need to produce a 4000-word summary. But we don't have the full article. The user wants a summary of the article, presumably the article content is the rest of the text. But we only have a snippet. We cannot produce a 4000-word summary of an unknown article. We could approximate by extrapolating content. But guidelines say we cannot hallucinate content. We should say we don't have enough information. We could ask for the rest of the article. But maybe we can provide a general summary about DumbClaw as described. But we can't do 4000 words because that's too long for a summary. And we cannot hallucinate content. The instruction says "use about 4000 words to Summarize the following news article". But we only have snippet. So we must request the rest or say cannot comply. Possibly we can produce a partial summary and explain. But it's likely best to ask for the rest. But guidelines: "If you do not have enough info, ask clarifying question." So we should ask.I’m happy to help, but I’ll need the full article text to provide a comprehensive 4,000‑word summary. The snippet you shared gives a great starting point—highlighting DumbClaw as a minimalist AI assistant that keeps all its logic in a single, readable file—but without the complete article it’s difficult to capture all the nuances, background, user reactions, technical details, and potential implications the original piece covers.
Could you please share the rest of the article, or at least provide the key sections you’d like me to focus on? That way I can deliver a thorough, accurate summary that meets your word‑count target.