Hilbert Agentic Computer: Local 235B (MoE) LLM + OpenClaw

Designed for Coding / Creating Agent Workflows

Category: Technology

Funding Campaigns

7a75b797068deb9571663e87cbe791bd_original
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A bold, beautifully built debut that turns "local AI agent rig" from concept into a shippable desktop. If you want to run massive models without renting cloud GPUs, Hilbert is hard to ignore.

Ended
3 days ago

1440%
HK$3,601,227
Raised
HK$250,000
Goal
View On Kickstarter
143
Backers
Live
Status

Ratings

Community Ratings
Reasons
Matt @ BackerClub
Matt @ BackerClub
8 days ago

This is Infplane Computing's first Kickstarter project, and they're swinging big with a desktop AI rig that runs 235B MoE models locally. AMD featured them at CES 2026, which is a real-deal endorsement for a debut creator. Hands-on YouTube reviews are already out in the wild, so the hardware exists and ships are imminent.

A sleek aluminum chassis houses AI MAX+ 395 silicon, 96GB of unified VRAM, and Infplane's KLEENE control system that pushes desktop into supercomputer territory. It runs Windows, Ubuntu, SteamOS, Fedora — anything you throw at it — plus pro tools like Autodesk, ANSYS, C4D, and Blender. One small box, every compute scenario.

Infplane is upfront about the timing risks of producing cutting-edge hardware and links to Kickstarter's accountability framework. The "Use of AI" disclosure is thoughtful and specific to their agentic OpenClaw stack. Sustainability messaging is light, but transparency on the hard stuff lands well.

Super Early Bird sits at about $3,001, then steps to roughly $3,202 (Early Bird), $3,402 (Kickstarter Special), and $3,602 (Final Call). A 2-Pack runs about $6,102 ($3,049 each) and the Ultimate Cluster 3-Pack lands at about $8,803 ($2,932 each). For a machine running 200B+ models locally, that pricing punches well above its weight.

Mitchell Foltz
Mitchell Foltz
8 days ago

This is Infplane Computing's first Kickstarter project, and they're swinging big with a desktop AI rig that runs 235B MoE models locally. AMD featured them at CES 2026, a real-deal endorsement for a debut creator. Hands-on YouTube reviews are already out, so the hardware exists and shipments are imminent.

A sleek aluminum chassis houses AI MAX+ 395 silicon, 96GB of unified VRAM, and Infplane's KLEENE control system, which pushes desktop computing into supercomputer territory. It runs Windows, Ubuntu, SteamOS, and Fedora — anything you throw at it — plus pro tools like Autodesk, ANSYS, C4D, and Blender. One small box for every compute scenario.

Infplane is upfront about the timing risks of producing cutting-edge hardware and links to Kickstarter's accountability framework. The "Use of AI" disclosure is thoughtful and tailored to their agentic OpenClaw stack. Sustainability messaging is light, but transparency on the hard stuff lands well.

Super Early Bird sits at about $3,001, then steps up to roughly $3,202 (Early Bird), $3,402 (Kickstarter Special), and $3,602 (Final Call). A 2-Pack runs about $6,102 ($3,049 each), and the Ultimate Cluster 3-Pack lands at about $8,803 ($2,932 each). For a machine running 200B+ models locally, that pricing punches well above its weight.

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