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How I launched Dima Cloud in one day with OpenClaw

For a long time I wanted to build my own website. Not just a simple profile page, but a real digital home for content, notes, philosophy, projects, and everything I am gathering around Dima Cloud.

But as often happens, between the idea and the launch there was always the same boring layer of work:

  • define the structure of the site;
  • write the copy;
  • shape the positioning;
  • choose hosting;
  • deploy WordPress;
  • configure the server;
  • connect the domain;
  • deal with themes, plugins, pages, and all the rest of the routine.

That is usually where resistance appeared. Not because it was impossible, but because it demanded too much attention. Especially when you already have a large body of notes, ideas, and unfinished material that simply does not yet have a form.

Then I found a solution — OpenClaw.

What OpenClaw became for me

For me, OpenClaw became a personal AI assistant with a real environment to work in.

I deployed OpenClaw locally on my computer, connected ChatGPT Codex as its brain, and gave it access to my Obsidian knowledge base.

Inside that base I already had notes about:

  • the Dima Cloud brand;
  • the philosophy of the project;
  • mission and positioning;
  • my personal operating system;
  • business directions;
  • content ideas;
  • the website structure.

So I was not starting from a blank page. I already had a lot of material — what I lacked was the bridge from thought to execution.

What happened next

The next step was buying a VPS and deploying WordPress on it.

After that, I gave OpenClaw almost full access to manage this layer:

  • server access;
  • WordPress management through WP-CLI;
  • site structure changes;
  • theme installation;
  • plugin management;
  • page creation;
  • content publishing.

That is where things became truly interesting.

I connected OpenClaw to Telegram, set up voice transcription, and at that point an old dream of mine became real.

What the workflow looks like now

  • I send thoughts, notes, and commands by voice;
  • OpenClaw receives them through Telegram;
  • transcribes speech;
  • uses my Obsidian base as context;
  • helps structure ideas;
  • publishes content to the site;
  • manages the site and infrastructure;
  • keeps evolving the system as the project grows.

In other words, I finally built the format I had been imagining for a long time:

I speak — the system builds.

Not metaphorically. Literally.

What we managed to do in one day

Within roughly a day, with the help of OpenClaw, we:

  • launched the server;
  • installed and configured WordPress;
  • connected the domain dima.cloud;
  • issued HTTPS certificates;
  • connected the Obsidian knowledge base;
  • set up Telegram as the interaction layer;
  • enabled voice recognition;
  • created the core site pages;
  • picked a theme;
  • installed the base plugins;
  • started building the structure and content of the site;
  • published the first live layer of Dima Cloud as a real project.

Why this matters to me

The value here is not only that the website finally exists.

The real value is that I saw a working scenario in which AI becomes not just a chatbot or a reference tool, but an operating layer between thought and execution.

I have had many ideas, notes, and materials for a long time. What was missing was a bridge between that potential and actual movement.

And that bridge is not another to-do list or a burst of motivation. It is a connected system:

  • Obsidian as the knowledge base,
  • Telegram as the interface,
  • voice as the natural input layer,
  • OpenClaw as the execution intelligence,
  • the site as the public output layer.

What comes next

This is only the beginning.

From here, I want to:

  • continue developing the Dima Cloud site;
  • publish notes and articles directly from the live process;
  • document real OpenClaw use cases;
  • develop the chain of voice → meaning → structure → publication;
  • turn chaotic streams of thought into a working operating system.

And maybe this is one of the most interesting things I have built recently:

not just “a website”, but a system that helps build the website — and the project behind it — further.

Final thought

Dima Cloud is not just a domain and not just a personal site.

It is a space where thinking, systems, AI, business, discipline, and the living path begin to connect.

And the fact that the first real version of this space came together in one day with the help of OpenClaw feels like a very strong signal of where all this can go next.

This is only the start.

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