Anthropic 新推出的电脑使用功能让用户能通过手机聊天远程控制 Mac 执行任务,无需复杂配置即可实现即时自动化。

效率工具📅 2026/03/24
#AI 趋势#API#Browser#演示#开发者#个人用户#低风险#手动触发#半自动#推文#报告#效率工具#远程办公
Claude can now use your Mac while you're away.

Open apps. Navigate your browser. Fill spreadsheets. Send files. Run dev tools. All from a conversation on your phone.

This is genuinely huge. Let me explain why.

If you're a Claude Code power user who's been hearing about OpenClaw but never had the time or energy to set it all up, configure the YAML files, figure out cron jobs, install skills - this just gave you 80% of the value with zero setup.

You're on a walk. You get an idea. You message Claude from Dispatch on your phone. It opens your Mac, pulls up the files, runs the thing, sends you the result. That workflow didn't exist 24 hours ago.

For non-technical people this is even bigger. You don't need to understand orchestration or terminal commands. You just talk to Claude and it does the work. That's the promise AI has been making for years and Anthropic just actually delivered it.

Now here's the part most people on AI Twitter are getting wrong.

"OpenClaw is dead" is trending again. Every time Anthropic ships something new this happens. And every time it's wrong for the same reason.

Computer use gives Claude better hands. It can click, type, scroll, open apps. That's a feature. A really good one.

But here's what it doesn't do:

→ It doesn't run 38 cron jobs at 3am while you sleep
→ It doesn't route tasks across Opus, Sonnet, Kimi, Codex, and local models based on what's cheapest and best for each job
→ It doesn't maintain persistent memory that compounds over weeks
→ It doesn't coordinate 74 specialised agents across an org chart
→ It doesn't self-improve its own skills after every execution
→ It doesn't work with GPT, Gemini, or any model that isn't Claude

OpenClaw is model-agnostic infrastructure. When Claude gets computer use, OpenClaw agents powered by Claude ALSO get computer use. Every improvement Anthropic ships is an upgrade to the system, not competition wi th it.

I still think open-core orchestration is where this is all heading. The ability to own your stack, pick your models, build skills that fit exactly how you work - that compounds in a way no closed platform can match.

But I'm not going to pretend this update isn't massive for the 90% of people who will never set up OpenClaw. For them, this might be enough. And that's fine.

Features get replaced. Infrastructure compounds.

Both can coexist. Both should.