The report card for Ai stacks.
Stackfax checks whether your tools, models, subscriptions, agents, workflows, and hardware actually fit the job before you spend money, burn tokens, expose data, or overbuild.
What Stackfax checks
Stackfax reviews the practical parts of your Ai stack, not just the model name.
Tools and models
Models, providers, subscriptions, APIs, local models, routers, and agent tools.
Cost and token risk
Token/API costs, context bloat, fallback behavior, subscription overlap, and waste.
Workflow readiness
Use-case fit, memory/context, approval gates, permissions, run receipts, and scaling risk.
Do you need local hardware, cloud tools, or better stack design?
Before buying a Mac mini, local Ai box, cloud server, premium model setup, or agent framework, Stackfax checks whether the workload actually needs it.
The goal is not to push hardware.
The goal is to match the stack to the job. A bigger stack is not always a better stack. The right stack depends on the workflow, risk, cost, and approval boundaries.
Free Mini Report
The free mini report gives you a first Stackfax verdict.
- basic verdict
- 1–5 star rating
- 2–3 risk flags
- one best next move
Quick Report
The Stackfax Quick Report is an early manual report for people who want clearer guidance before buying, automating, or copying the wrong setup.
- Hardware Verdict
- Token Burn Audit
- OpenClaw Starter Stack Check
- Model Subscription Fit Check
- Business Automation Safety Audit
Built for messy real stacks
Beginners, builders, experts, and businesses all need the same thing: fit before spend.
Beginners
You heard about OpenClaw, agents, local Ai, APIs, subscriptions, and automation, but you do not know where to start.
Builders
You want to build fast without creating token waste, unsafe permissions, or workflow gaps.
Businesses
You want Ai automation, but need process clarity, data boundaries, approval gates, and accountability first.
Cheap model drafts.
Strong model decides.
Human approves anything touching customers, money, inventory, credentials, or production systems.
Early manual status
Stackfax reports are early and may be prepared manually. Stackfax gives stack guidance, not guaranteed business, financial, legal, trading, medical, security, compliance, or technical outcomes.
Do not submit passwords, API keys, payment details, wallet information, private customer data, private legal documents, private financial documents, or sensitive personal information. Stackfax only needs a description of your stack, workflow, tools, and concerns.