AI at Work

AI agents in 2026: 5 ways they can help

AI agents are all the rage – though they’re just getting off the ground
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We examine how AI is changing the future of work — and how, in many ways, that future is already here.


Agentic AI is poised to take massive leaps in 2026. When agentic AI buzz grew in the wake of OpenAI's rise, many of the services required heavy input to deliver results to users. But with the advent of tools like OpenClaw and the continuing maturation of AI-powered services, AI that can act on your behalf is pushing agentic AI to new levels of functionality for users.

While OpenClaw's utility is unmatched by most AI agents, there are will plenty you can make use of right now. Here's a look at how they can help you with your daily life.

AI agents can help with your shopping

A major use-case for agentic AI is in researching and buying products. That makes sense — more involvement in e-commerce can only mean more money towards the builder of the agent. To be clear, we aren't quite at the fully human-free version of shopping that's likely to become more common soon. However, if you still want to keep an eye on the shopping process while cutting down on the steps you actually need to take, some of the currently available AI agents might be helpful.


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Instead of forcing users to navigate individual retailer checkouts, companies are building agents that handle the purchasing logistics for you directly from the research phase. For example, Google has a "Buy for Me" feature that works on top of its existing price-tracking tools. Once you set your payment methods and shipping addresses, the agent will make the purchase directly on the retailer's website itself. Similarly, search-first platforms are integrating native checkouts. Perplexity features an "Instant Buy" tool that allows you to research and buy a product without ever leaving its interface. You simply fill out your details the first time, and the platform stores your information so the AI can manually make future purchases on your behalf.

How agentic AI can increase work productivity

Workspace agents are designed as autonomous administrators for daily tasks and scheduling. These systems can be configured to research, write, and organize projects entirely in the background. ClickUp, for example, offers workspace agents it calls Super Agents, that operate with little to no manual triggering from the user. Notion takes a similar approach by embedding AI directly into existing workflows, letting users select specific models for different tasks and set up multiple custom agents configured for distinct administrative functions — although Notion’s Custom Agents are still rolling out.

Specialized agents are also handling calendar management through dynamic automation. Platforms like Reclaim.ai analyze a user’s task list, recurring habits, and existing commitments to automatically block out focus time. As the week progresses, the agent enforces travel buffers and resolves meeting conflicts in real time, removing the need for manual schedule adjustments.

Agentic AI is here to help with more complex demands

Agentic AI is being applied to local hardware and dedicated code editors too. In fact, software development is an industry that has heavily adopted AI

Some open-source agents operate directly on user machines rather than through cloud-based web interfaces. For example, OpenClaw is a local agent that plugs into standard messaging platforms like Telegram and Discord. It runs continuously, connects to external language models via API, and executes tasks using direct access to local files and system commands. Because it often requires root-level execution privileges to fully function, it has some pretty huge cybersecurity risks though. You’ll probably want to contain these tools on secondary machines with limited data access to avoid issues.

Other systems focus on orchestrating multiple specialized agents. Tools like Microsoft's AutoGen use event-driven architectures that allow distinct agent personas to communicate, share memory, and execute code in isolated environments. Setting these up requires programming knowledge though, so it’s not a completely code-free tool. Without proper configuration, interacting agents can fall into conversational loops, failing to complete their objectives while continuing to consume API credits.

In software development, agents are increasingly integrated directly into the development environment. Code editors like Windsurf feature embedded agents that analyze the codebase, manage dependencies, and run code directly in the terminal to fix errors in real time. While these platforms offer access to advanced reasoning models and competitive subscription tiers for professional use, they’re not pure "no-code" solutions. Operating them effectively requires a foundational understanding of programming and software architecture.

Personal finance agents can help you hold onto your cash

The personal finance software space has moved away from static budgeting dashboards into proactive systems that actively manage your money and fight for cost savings on your behalf.

Platforms like Cleo, for example, have pushed the AI financial assistant from passive analysis into active intervention. With its Autopilot feature, the system can detect unusual spending, shifts in income, or other changes. When it finds an issue, it can automatically move money into savings to protect it, issue cash advances to prevent overdraft fees, and dynamically adjust your long-term financial roadmap — all without requiring a manual prompt.

Other platforms take a strictly analytical approach. Monarch Money has an integrated AI assistant that lets you query deep, multi-year transaction histories using natural language. You can ask it to surface spending patterns, optimize tax strategies, explain ETFs, or project net worth trajectories. Unlike Cleo, Monarch operates entirely as an advisor — it will analyze the data, but it won't autonomously move money or make trades on your behalf.

It's important to note that many AI assistants require access to sensitive information as part of their functions. Please ensure you understand and are comfortable with the data access requirements and data protection efforts of any of these services before trying them.

Smart home agents can improve your comfort

AI is playing a big role in the smart home too. Many smart home ecosystems are baking AI features in, allowing you to create automations and control devices using natural language.

At the high end, the focus is on dedicated hardware processors and localized microphones that serve as a central nervous system for complex setups. Systems like Josh.ai, for example, are installed exclusively by professional integrators and can support up to 500 controllable devices spanning AV, HVAC, and lighting. The main appeal here is privacy, since the processing all runs locally, but the downside is the cost. It definitely isn't a DIY solution.

At the opposite end of the spectrum are local smart home frameworks that require more technical knowledge but offer absolute control. Platforms like Home Assistant have improved their AI features immensely over the last year, letting users connect their homes to local large language models (like Ollama) or plug in API keys for cloud models. Paired with dedicated voice hardware, the AI can execute highly specific spatial commands, recognizing exactly which room you're in and adjusting only the relevant devices. While the initial setup is much more hands-on than mainstream alternatives, the ability to avoid corporate ecosystems altogether makes this approach a top choice for privacy-conscious users.

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