Zo Computer -FREE · ✦ GEM -Free plan available. Basic $18/month.

Every morning I wake up to pre-foreclosure and foreclosure data I did not pull. Properties, stats, market monitoring. Already done. Already waiting.

I set those automations up once. I have not touched them since.

That is the shortest version of what Zo is. It is a computer in the cloud you can text from your phone. It has its own browser. It runs while you sleep. It does the things you would have done manually, on a schedule, without your machine staying on, without a separate server, and for most people, for free.

I came to Zo because I wanted an agent with its own computer and browser. What I did not expect was how much else it could do. That is the part worth staying for.

What it actually is

Zo is a personal computer that lives in the cloud, not on your desk. It has a hard drive. It has a file system. It runs 24 hours a day. You can text it from your phone the same way you would text any AI assistant, except this one can actually do things, not just tell you about them.

Most AI tools are assistants. They think, they write, they answer. Zo executes. It can browse the web, run automations on a schedule, host your websites and apps, manage your files, send you emails and texts, and run agents that work on your behalf while you are not watching.

Out of the box. No setup marathon. No days of troubleshooting.

Three built-in tools worth knowing before we go further: it saves full YouTube and webpage transcripts from any URL with no extensions; it does deep research across academic papers, SEC filings, LinkedIn profiles, GitHub repos, and PDFs in one request; and it has Stripe Connect built in so you can sell products directly from the chat window. Most people do not expect any of those to come standard.

The sleep part (and why it matters more than it sounds)

There is a category of AI tool called an autonomous agent. Instead of asking for every step, it acts on its own. The most well-known version right now is OpenClaw. The appeal is obvious. The problem is that setting up OpenClaw is a project -it takes time, technical patience, and a tolerance for things breaking in non-obvious ways.

Zo solves the same problem from the other direction. The automations, the agent capabilities, the web access: all built in and ready. You do not install it. You do not configure a server. You do not debug a deployment at 11pm.

You tell it what to do and it does it. Set a schedule, define what you want tracked, and Zo handles the rest. Every day. Without you. And if something does need technical attention, Zo can handle that too -full Linux terminal access if you want it, but you never have to leave the chat window.

The browser nobody talks about enough

Zo has a built-in cloud browser that runs on its computer, not yours.

This matters for a few reasons. It does not slow your machine down. It stays logged into your accounts across sessions. And it can interact with pages, not just read them. Clicks, forms, navigation, the whole thing.

Social media accounts. AI platforms. Tools that normally fight back against automation. Zo has its own browser session, separate from yours, and once it is in, it is in. I have used it to run sessions on sites that normally block automation, keep accounts logged in without a dedicated machine running, and handle tasks that previously required manual time I did not want to spend. That category of friction used to be something I just accepted.

Zo can also connect to MCP servers, which is the standard that lets AI tools plug into outside services. Think of it like a USB port for AI. Every time a new tool supports MCP, Zo can plug into it. I host my own MCP server on Zo so every agent I run can connect to the same set of tools without configuring it from scratch each time.

Personas, skills, and making it yours

Zo lets you create multiple personas, each with its own personality, instructions, and assigned AI model. I have different ones set up for different types of work, and each behaves accordingly without having to re-explain context.

Skills are reusable workflows you can build or add from the community library. Browse pre-built ones for content workflows, research processes, coding, and more. Add them in a few clicks.

Rules let you control how Zo behaves in specific situations. Never send an email without confirming first. Always use a specific format for code files. Apply certain instructions only in a particular folder. Rules and personas stack, so the behavior stays consistent no matter what you are doing.

Models: every best-in-class option is available

You are not locked into one AI model, and you are not stuck with whatever Zo decides is the default.

Zo supports models from OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Meta, DeepSeek, and more. That means Claude for writing and reasoning, GPT-4o, Gemini, Llama, and others. The free models included are genuinely capable for agent tasks. Not "good for free." Just good. If you want frontier models for heavier work, they are there too.

You can assign different models to different personas or channels. Use a lighter model for quick tasks and a heavier one for research or code review. Or bring your own API keys from any provider. I use OpenRouter, which lets me pull from dozens of providers and control exactly what I spend on each use case. Zo supports it without extra configuration.

Your costs stay in your control. That is rarer than it should be.

This is the part that stopped me

Zo has a skill for running OpenClaw.

OpenClaw is a fully autonomous AI agent. It acts on its own, without being prompted for every step. Running it usually requires a dedicated machine or a cloud setup that costs real money to maintain.

On Zo, you can host it on the free plan, using free models, on a 100GB hard drive that costs nothing.

Your AI agent gets its own computer to live on.

And because Zo gives that agent full access to a file system, a browser, automations, and a terminal, the agent can do more than just run. It can manage files. Update itself. Work on its own tools. Program new behavior. The agent and the computer it lives on become one thing, each capable of improving the other.

The same applies to Hermes, another open-source agent framework, or any other agent you want to run. OpenClaw just has the Zo skill already built out. For anything else, the terminal is there and the machine does whatever you point it at.

Run OpenClaw on Zo: zo.computer/skills/zopenclaw

Browse all Zo skills: zo.computer/skills

Pricing

Plan

Monthly

AI Credits

Server

Always On

Free

$0

Daily limit, free models

Limited

No

Basic

$18

$10/mo included

4 cores, 32GB RAM

Yes

Pro

$64

$40/mo included

16 cores, 128GB RAM

Yes

Ultra

$200

$100/mo included

64 cores, 512GB RAM

Yes

All plans include 100GB of disk storage. The one real reason to upgrade from free is always-on availability. The free plan goes to sleep when not in use, which matters if your automations need to run at a specific time. If you are just chatting, hosting a static site, or experimenting, free is a real option, not a teaser.

On credits: Zo currently offers free model access that goes a long way. If you need more, you can connect OpenRouter and use free models from there without paying Zo anything extra. I upgraded to Basic for the always-on server and faster processing, not because the free plan stopped working.

The hardest thing about Zo

It is not the setup. Setup is easy. It is not the learning curve. There is not much of one.

The hardest thing about Zo is wrapping your head around everything you could hand off to it, and then actually doing it.

Most people are used to AI as a conversation partner. You ask, it answers, you do something with that answer. Zo works that way too. But the ceiling is much higher than a chat window. Getting there just means starting to think about your tasks differently.

What do I do repeatedly that I could schedule? What do I check manually that Zo could monitor and report back on? What am I hosting or paying for somewhere that could live here instead?

If you want to stay in the chat interface, it is there. If you want to drop into a terminal and have full control of a Linux machine, that is there too. If you want your AI agent to handle the technical parts entirely, that works as well.

The chat interface is the entry point, not the ceiling. Most people stop there. The ones who do not are the ones I hear about six months later saying they rebuilt how they work.

THE BUNNY

"Your AI agent can now have its own computer. It lives there. We are not at the beginning of something anymore."

Zo Computer -FREE · ✦ GEM

Free plan available. Basic $18/month. Pro $64/month.

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