Show HN: Eve — Managed OpenClaw for work

April 10, 2026
A tattooed hand holds a red folding knife in a car interior.
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What Eve says it can do

It has been reported that Eve is pitching itself as a managed assistant with "100+ built‑in skills" aimed at work: research, writing, coding, design and more. The product page linked from Hacker News (https://eve.new/login) lists a grab bag of real‑world asks — schedule me, check competitors' pricing, chase overdue invoices, draft a launch content calendar, book travel, file expense reports, apply for senior PM roles, even handle a leaking faucet when guests arrive. Big promise. Big remit. Like having a personal Jarvis, only with invoices and plumbing.

Tasks that read like a human's to‑do list

The examples are notable for mixing high‑level strategy and low‑friction errands. One minute you're asking about product moves from a competitor; the next you're texting receipts and expecting a post‑trip report. It makes a point: this isn't just automated copywriting. It's workflow orchestration — calendar sleuthing, reminders, follow‑ups, bookings, outreach. The emotional pivot is clear: relief. Who doesn't want to delegate the small, nagging tasks that sap your brainpower? But who watches the agent? Good question.

Privacy, trust and the fine print

The page closes with a reminder about Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. That matters. Allegedly powerful assistants can do a lot, but handing them meeting threads, invoices, travel logins and personal photos raises obvious security and compliance questions. Will teams treat Eve as a tool that augments work, or as a blunt instrument that requires heavy guardrails? Keep an eye on how it handles permissions, audit trails and third‑party integrations — the devil is in those details. Want to try it? The login is public, but proceed with caution.

Sources: eve.new, Hacker News