What problem does Docker solve (when self-hosting)?
When you self-host OpenClaw, Docker helps package the runtime and its dependencies so you can run it consistently on a server. It's useful for developers who want to deploy and update the stack themselves. The tradeoff is that you need to install Docker, understand images and containers, and keep everything running and updated.
Why EasyClaw doesn't require Docker
EasyClaw runs OpenClaw for you on our infrastructure. We handle the runtime, the environment, and the connection to Telegram. You don't see or manage Docker—you just sign up, connect Telegram, pick your AI model (Claude, ChatGPT, or Gemini), and chat. So if you're not technical or you'd rather not deal with servers and containers, EasyClaw lets you use OpenClaw without Docker or any installation.
Who is this for?
This is for non-technical users, founders, and teams who want an OpenClaw-powered agent without DevOps. You get the same kind of autonomous agent (inbox help, summaries, reminders, research, etc.) without setting up or maintaining anything. Just connect and go.
OpenClaw without containers or servers
Sign up, connect Telegram, pick your model. No installation.
What is OpenClaw? →