You already have a laptop or desktop PC, but now AMD thinks you need another one—an “agent PC” to support your main machine.
AMD has responded to the growing success of OpenClaw’s AI agents with a new suggestion: customers should buy “agent PCs,” which would take the power of the Ryzen AI Max+ processor (surprise!) and repurpose it to run an agent swarm. AMD’s idea is that you should use a “normal” PC plus a secondary agent PC for running AI apps.
To help out, AMD published a guide to running OpenClaw locally on an AMD processor. But AMD’s argument reads less like a pitch to the industry and more like a manifesto.
“An Agent Computer is a new category of device built to run your AI agents full-time,” AMD said in a blog post. “It can sit in your home or office, always on, always available, always working.”
AMD goes on: “You do not operate it like a PC. You delegate to it. You send a message on WhatsApp. Your agent gets moving. You drop a task into Slack. Your agent takes it from there. You ask for an update in Message. Your agent reports back. A personal computer runs your apps. An Agent Computer runs your agents so they can run the apps for you. That is the shift.” [Emphasis is AMD’s.]
AMD’s argument is that only the Ryzen AI Max+ is suited to these types of PCs, given the enormous potential amount of memory (128GB) such systems can come with. Much of that memory can be configured as VRAM, the space in which AI algorithms work.
OpenClaw can be launched with just a single line of code on Windows, macOS, and Linux, then linked to everything from LLMs to Gmail to Spotify to work independently. OpenClaw’s agents then work together to perform tasks like researching and writing presentations, tracking down the details of trips, and more. OpenClaw can be allowed access to the PC as a whole or run in sandboxed mode for more security.
In any event, AMD believes that a Ryzen AI Max+ platform is a superior offering. OpenClaw can be run on a variety of platforms, but Mac Minis—which combine powerful and power-efficient Apple M-series silicon with a compact form factor—have anecdotally become a popular choice for the platform. The current Mac Mini, however, maxes out at 64GB of RAM.
On paper, at least, that might give AMD’s Ryzen Max+ chip an advantage… at least until Apple updates the Mac Mini once again.
Is now really the time for this?
It’s difficult not to be skeptical.
For one thing, IDC has lowered its PC market forecasts yet again, predicting that the days of inexpensive PCs might be over for now. A Ryzen AI Max+ box like the Framework Desktop we reviewed once cost $2,515, but now costs $2,700—and that’s without any storage. You already know that RAM and storage prices are skyrocketing.
AI developers with cash to spare might be able to cash out a Bitcoin or two and buy themselves a box to sit on their desk, but the average consumer staring down rapidly rising gas prices might think twice about spending an extra two grand for a local AI box when the cloud exists.
Granted, local agentic AI is the strongest argument yet for local AI hardware, since AI art and LLMs can easily be run in the cloud for free. A dedicated “Agent PC” box that you can disconnect and reformat in a pinch makes more sense to me than agents which are roaming through the cloud on your behalf.
If AMD is trying to convince the average consumer to buy and set up an Agent PC, however, the company might want to think about a more streamlined installation process. AMD’s OpenClaw instructions go on and on—they’re straightforward, but the length is daunting. Not to mention all the concerns about OpenClaw itself.
The problem is that AMD is trying to lure users in with the premise that an OpenClaw-powered Agent PC is for everyone, when the cost and complexity put it out of reach for many. That doesn’t mean it’s a bad idea! But starting OpenClaw with a cheaper Raspberry Pi or waiting until the technology matures might be a safer bet right now.



