Open Summit AI is today's event — the one we're walking into. A Melbourne convention about using agentic AI to run a business. Promoted by an agency called Number. A name worth remembering on its own.
OpenClaw is a different thing — the most popular open-source personal AI agent in the world right now. ~371,000 stars on GitHub. Created by an Austrian developer named Peter Steinberger (he later joined OpenAI; the project lives on as an independent foundation). It runs locally on your computer, uses your own API keys, and surfaces through messaging apps like Telegram and Signal. It's the brand-of-the-moment in agentic AI.
The Facebook event title cheekily reads "Open Summit AI — Australia's Largest Agentic AI Convention (OpenClaw)." Don't be confused — that's a marketing tag, not a partnership. The OpenClaw foundation didn't organise this event. The convention is just riding the wave of OpenClaw's popularity to signal what the day is really about: agentic AI for business.
Here's why this matters for us, though: Opta is actually built on OpenClaw. Not the marketing version — the real thing. OpenClaw is the runtime underneath Opta's autonomous bots. So when people in the room talk about agentic AI, that's our home language. We're not customers learning. We're peers building.
The distinction in three sentences: Open Summit is the convention. OpenClaw is the tool. Opta is what you get when you take OpenClaw and build a whole stack on top of it. That's the shape of today.