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Meta's Manus launches desktop app to bring its AI agent onto personal devices amid OpenClaw craze

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Why This Matters

Meta's Manus has launched a desktop app that enables its AI agent to operate directly on personal devices, allowing for more integrated and complex interactions with local files and applications. This move aligns Manus with open-source competitors like OpenClaw and reflects a broader industry shift toward decentralized AI agents that enhance user control and functionality. The development signifies a step forward in making AI more accessible and practical for everyday consumers and professionals, while also raising important privacy and security considerations.

Key Takeaways

The Manus logo is displayed on a smartphone screen, with the Meta logo visible in the background.

Artificial intelligence start-up Manus, recently acquired by Meta, launched a new desktop application Monday that brings its AI agent directly onto personal laptops.

The company's general agent — which can execute complex, multi-step tasks — previously operated exclusively in the cloud, and was typically accessed through a web interface.

However, through the new Manus Desktop application, a feature called 'My Computer' lets its agents work directly with local files, tools and applications on a user's device.

The expanded offering aligns Meta and Manus's agents more closely with OpenClaw, an open-sourced AI agent that is also downloaded onto users' local devices.

OpenClaw was founded by Austrian software developer Peter Steinberger late last year, and its popularity has helped spark an AI agent frenzy. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang described OpenClaw as the "next ChatGPT' in an interview with Jim Cramer on CNBC's "Mad Money" Tuesday.

Steinberger has also been hired by ChatGPT maker OpenAI, which represents one of Meta's main AI competitors.

Unlike OpenClaw, which is free and open-sourced under an MIT license, Manus is primarily a paid subscription service.

According to Manus, its My Computer offering allows its agent to read, analyze, edit files, and launch or control applications on the machine.

For example, the company said that users can instruct Manus to organize thousands of internal images on their hard drive. Beyond file management, My Computer is also compatible with coding applications and can create an app within minutes, it said.

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