Title: I was juggling Codex, Claude Code, and a dozen remote machines — here's how I unified them
If you run AI tools on more than one machine, you probably recognize this mess: a Codex session on a server, a Claude Code window on your laptop, an OpenClaw agent on a client's PC, and a remote-desktop app just to peek at any of them. Every tool is powerful; together they're a switching-cost nightmare.
After losing a long research run to a dropped SSH session for the third time, I went looking for a way to stop treating each machine as its own island. I ended up consolidating everything onto SuperAI (https://api1688.site/), and it changed how I work. Here's what it actually does and where it fits.
The core idea: an AI workstation command center
SuperAI isn't another chatbot. It's a console that connects to the natively-installed AI tools on your own machines. Each account you create is a workspace that can bind OpenClaw, Codex, Claude Code, and a remote desktop. You enroll a machine with one command — the node agent installs and runs in the background, and it stays connected even after you close the terminal.
That last point matters more than it sounds. Background persistence means a long-running task keeps going whether or not you're watching it.
Long tasks, finally stable
The feature I leaned on hardest is the long-task engine. SuperAI treats long workloads as first-class: streaming output, node heartbeat, task leases, and recovery probes. When a connection blips, the task isn't dead — the platform detects it and tries to resume instead of throwing away an hour of progress.
For research, code analysis, report/PPT generation, or anything that runs more than a couple of minutes, this is the difference between "I'll babysit it" and "I'll check back later."
R-Desktop: when the AI isn't enough
Some jobs need a human hand. SuperAI's R-Desktop pane (built on the RustDesk approach) lets you view and control the real desktop — open the browser, fix a file, dismiss a dialog, or watch the AI tool do its thing live. No second app to manage.
Three clients, one workflow
- Web — instant access, shareable.
- Windows EXE — always-on desktop, good for a daily driver.
- Android APK — monitor tasks and manage accounts from your phone. (Remote desktop is best on web/EXE.)
Why it scales for teams and resellers
This is where SuperAI diverges from "single-user tool": it's built around accounts and isolation from day one.
- Free — 14-day trial, 1 account.
- Pro ($29.99/mo) — up to 30 accounts.
- Pro+ ($69.99/mo) — up to 100 accounts, yearly billing 10% off.
If you manage AI hosts for multiple clients, each gets its own account, workspace, nodes, chats, files, and tasks. There's an admin panel, ticketing, and PayPal billing built in — it's a product you can actually resell, not just use.
Who it's for
- Developers running Codex/Claude Code across servers and laptops.
- Cross-border / e-commerce teams that need many accounts, many regions, market research and report generation.
- AI service providers / resellers who manage client fleets and want account isolation + billing.
- Remote-ops folks who want one place to watch and, if needed, take over a machine.
The honest take
SuperAI won't replace any single AI tool — it's not trying to. Its value is unification and remote access: the same agents you already trust, no longer locked to the box they're installed on, with long tasks that survive bad networks and a remote desktop for the moments automation can't handle.
If your AI workflow spans more than one machine, try it free for 14 days (no card): https://api1688.site/.
(Disclosure: this is shared because it solved a real workflow problem for me. Pricing/features accurate as of writing.)
















