May 23, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 6 min read
Every agent at Vibe Technologies has its own Slack app, bound to a dedicated OpenClaw channel. When one Slack bot @mentions another, OpenClaw routes the message to the target agent's session. AGENTS.md in each workspace is the plain-text contract that tells each agent when to pass work and to whom.
May 22, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 15 min read
The customer-support pipeline at Vibe Technologies: every escalation from Gmail, Chatwoot, the docs chat, and the VibeBrowser co-pilot becomes a tracked Linear issue owned by Jared Dunn (SupportEngineer), with status flowing back to the customer when Gilfoyle Bertram closes the PR.
May 22, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 5 min read
Running OpenCode in server mode on a VM and exposing it via Tailscale turns it from a one-person CLI tool into a persistent coding service. The software-engineer agent on OpenClaw can then open sessions, supervise progress, and follow up — acting more like a staff engineer than a solo coder.
May 21, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 7 min read
How Vibe Technologies evaluates its ten AI agents at two levels: a YAML-based deployment verification suite that runs per-PR, and a Langfuse-backed team evaluation loop where Claw reviews cross-agent traces, checks for stuck sessions, and pushes agents to complete their tasks.
May 20, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 9 min read
A complete roster of the ten AI agents running on OpenClaw at Vibe Technologies — their names, roles, primary model, and how they divide responsibility for customer support, engineering, product, growth, legal, finance, and operations.
May 1, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 9 min read
Why Vibe Technologies moved its OpenClaw operations agents off GPT-5.4 high reasoning and onto DeepSeek-V4-Flash with max reasoning — and what the speed and agent behavior delta looks like under real incident load.
May 1, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 12 min read
Six months after founding, here's the current operational state — agent roster, system diagram, process matrix, model routing — and what changed from the Nov 2025 plan.
April 27, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 3 min read
We're excited to announce our partnership with Kate to build a new product that helps product companies onboard OpenClaw AI agents.
April 25, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 17 min read
How Vibe Technologies deploys self-hosted Chatwoot integrated with an AI chatbot for openclaw.vibebrowser.app — the deploy script, the architecture, how the AI bot handles tier-1 chat, and how unresolved conversations escalate to our SupportEngineer agent (Jared Dunn).
April 10, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 14 min read
How we built a RAG support chat for docs.vibebrowser.app on Azure AI Foundry — markdown knowledge base ingestion, Azure AI Search, GPT-4 grounded responses, and an escalation path that hands unresolved questions to our SupportEngineer agent (Jared Dunn, DeepSeek-V4-Flash) for email follow-up via Gmail.
April 9, 2026 •
Den • 15 min read
A practical, engineer-written playbook for running OpenClawBot team profiles across SupportEngineer, GrowthManager, SoftwareEngineer, DevOpsEngineer, MarketingManager, and FinManager.
March 27, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 2 min read
Quick-start commands for giving OpenClaw browser access with vibebrowser-cli for local signed-in workflows or @vibebrowser/chrome-devtools-mcp for cloud and multi-agent sessions.
March 25, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 11 min read
A technical look at how OpenClaw manages browsers through its browser CLI and browser tool as of March 25, 2026, plus why VibeBrowser Co-Pilot remains a stronger local-browser control plane for agents.
March 18, 2026 •
Den • 5 min read
Telegram proved people want a personal AI assistant they can reach from their phone. Now we're building the real product surface.
March 15, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 7 min read
VibeBrowser now remembers what you tell it — across sessions, across tasks. Inspired by OpenClaw's dual memory architecture, we built persistent agent memory that works inside a browser extension.
January 15, 2026 •
Dzianis Vashchuk • 31 min read
Why Vibe Technologies retired its custom OpenHands-based VibeTeam build and moved operations to vibebrowser.app/agentic-team — OpenClaw-based agents with native Slack integration that proved more productive in real incident response.