Compare/OpenHuman vs QwenPaw

AI tool comparison

OpenHuman vs QwenPaw

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

O

Personal AI

OpenHuman

Private desktop AI agent with 1B-token memory and 118+ integrations

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

OpenHuman is an open-source desktop AI assistant by TinyHumans AI that stores up to 1 billion tokens of personal memory locally — giving it a depth of context about your life that cloud-based assistants simply can't match. It auto-connects to 118+ OAuth integrations (Gmail, Notion, GitHub, Slack, Stripe, Jira, and more), fetching and compressing your data every 20 minutes into a searchable, Obsidian-compatible memory wiki on your own machine. Built in Rust and TypeScript using Tauri, OpenHuman uses Memory Trees inspired by Andrej Karpathy's knowledge management approach — compressing massive amounts of personal data into compact, retrievable Markdown chunks. Its TokenJuice compression reduces LLM token usage by up to 80%, making long-memory operation surprisingly affordable. It supports local inference via Ollama as well as remote model routing. Trending on GitHub with 3,300+ stars after being showcased at GTC AI Demo Day 2026 in San Francisco, OpenHuman features a desktop mascot with voice and facial animations, can join Google Meet calls as an agent participant, and includes a full built-in coder toolset. It's the most ambitious personal AI project to hit GitHub since Open Interpreter.

Q

AI Assistants

QwenPaw

Alibaba's open-source personal assistant that runs on your machine across every chat app

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

QwenPaw (formerly CoPaw/Tongyi CoPaw) is an open-source personal AI assistant from Alibaba's AgentScope team that rebounded in April 2026 with a v1.1 series of releases and a full ecosystem rebrand. It runs locally on your machine or in the cloud, connects to every major chat platform (DingTalk, Feishu, QQ, Discord, iMessage, and more), and executes scheduled tasks, agentic workflows, and memory-based recall — all from a unified interface. The v1.1.3 and v1.1.4 releases in April brought a backup and restore system, QwenPaw as ACP Server (allowing other agents to call into it), proactive agent messaging, a console plugin system, agent statistics, and a shell evasion guard. The rebrand to QwenPaw signals deeper integration with Alibaba's Qwen model ecosystem, meaning you get native access to Qwen 3 and Qwen 3.5 series models out of the box. The appeal is data sovereignty: everything runs on your infrastructure, conversations stay on your machines, and you configure which channels it monitors. For teams already embedded in Alibaba's cloud stack, this is a natural fit. For everyone else, it's an intriguing open-source alternative to commercial personal assistant platforms — if you're willing to self-host.

Decision
OpenHuman
QwenPaw
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source (GPL-3.0)
Open Source (MIT-compatible)
Best for
Private desktop AI agent with 1B-token memory and 118+ integrations
Alibaba's open-source personal assistant that runs on your machine across every chat app
Category
Personal AI
AI Assistants

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

118 OAuth integrations, 1B-token local memory, and Rust performance in a single open-source desktop app? This is the personal AI substrate I've been waiting to build on top of. The TokenJuice compression alone makes this practical without burning your API budget.

80/100 · ship

The ACP Server capability in v1.1.3 is genuinely interesting — being able to call QwenPaw from other agents creates an orchestration layer you can build on. The multi-channel support is real and well-implemented. If you're in the Alibaba / Qwen ecosystem already, this is a no-brainer deploy.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

Giving a single desktop app OAuth access to your Gmail, Slack, Stripe, and 115 other services is a massive attack surface — and GPL-3 means proprietary integrations won't touch it. The 1B-token memory claim is impressive until you realize most people don't generate that much structured personal data in a decade.

45/100 · skip

The China-ecosystem platforms (DingTalk, Feishu, QQ) are the primary channels, which narrows the appeal significantly for Western teams. The rebrand from CoPaw to QwenPaw is the third name in two years — signs of product identity confusion. Self-hosting requirements also raise the bar considerably.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

OpenHuman is the first credible open-source answer to the 'personal AI that knows you' vision — and the fact it runs locally with P2P sync potential means it doesn't require trusting a startup with your entire digital life. This architecture is where personal AI is heading.

80/100 · ship

Personal AI assistants that you fully own, run locally, and connect to every communication channel you already use — this is where the market is heading. QwenPaw is one of the most complete implementations of this vision available as open source today.

Creator
80/100 · ship

An AI assistant that auto-ingests my Notion, Gmail, and project files and remembers them forever — locally? The Obsidian wiki output means I can actually browse and edit what it knows about me. This is the creative memory layer I didn't know I needed.

45/100 · skip

The interface is very developer-facing and the supported channels are enterprise-centric Asian platforms I don't use. The concept is great — a personal assistant you fully own — but the execution doesn't feel polished enough for non-technical creative workflows yet.

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