Smart Living

Home and life alerts that call instead of notify.

Examples

What you can set up

“Call me when my package is out for delivery”

Your bot checks package tracking services across carriers. You hear the estimated window and can plan your day around it.

“Call me if the air quality drops below moderate”

Your bot checks air quality services and calls when levels drop. You hear what’s causing it and whether to stay indoors.

“Call me if it’s going to rain in the next hour”

Your bot checks hyperlocal weather forecasts. Close the windows, grab the umbrella, or bring the dog inside.

“Call me when the electricity price drops below 10c/kWh”

Your bot checks electricity spot prices and calls when rates drop. You hear the current rate so you can run the dishwasher, charge your EV, or do laundry off-peak.

“Call me if my Home Assistant detects a water leak”

Your bot connects to Home Assistant and monitors your leak sensors. You hear which sensor triggered and where the leak is, so you can act before it gets worse.

“Call me when the washing machine is done”

Your bot watches your smart washer’s status and calls when the cycle finishes. You move the clothes to the dryer before they sit.

Why a phone call?

Smart home notifications pile up and get ignored. A phone call is reserved for things that actually need your attention: a package at the door, a leak sensor going off, your laundry being done. It’s the difference between a push notification buried in your lock screen and a phone ringing in your pocket.

FAQ

Your OpenClaw agent accesses services like Home Assistant for smart home devices, air quality monitors, package trackers, and weather services. clawr.ing is the phone, your agent is the brain.

Yes. Your agent can watch for email notifications from services that don’t have APIs, or connect through automation platforms like Make or n8n to bridge the gap.

clawr.ing calls your phone number, so it works wherever you are. That’s the point: alerts find you, you don’t find them.