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OpenClaw, Not Today
I almost spent the day trying out OpenClaw on my personal PC. I was tempted because I find the process fun and interesting. I talked myself out of it because I know I have no real use for this type of system in my personal life. I would never use a setup like this for work, as I work with many clients. Oh well. Continue reading →
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Playing with Claude Code and Claude Cowork
Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve dabbled with Claude Code and Claude Cowork to see what it’s all about. I love tinkering with technology, after all. Claude Cowork is essentially a less technical way to do the same thing Claude Code can do. It can be used to manipulate files in specified folders as well as connect to the many online services you may have. You can then automate tasks, do research, clean up files, create or manage notes, and the list goes on. Continue reading →
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Using Claude Code to Manage Your Obsidian Vault
Claude Code I’ve been seeing many posts and videos talking about using Claude Code to manage their local Obsidian vaults. I played around with this and found it potentially very valuable for someone (like me) who enjoys making notes but doesn’t enjoy the organization of said notes. Or for processing meeting notes and other work-related data and acting as a project manager assistant that handles all the grunt work I would rather not do myself. Continue reading →
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Insights from a NotebookLM podcast talking about my site
Just for fun, I created a Google NotebookLM notebook and set this site as its only source. I then listened to the podcast Deep Dive. The results were quite interesting. One of the main discussion points was how “the author”—me—seems obsessed with finding the “best” app, constantly switching between blog hosting platforms, browsers, notebooks, e-ink devices, etc. Yeah, already knew I had a problem. But I’d argue it’s not always about finding the best app or hardware but rather about satisfying my curiosity. Continue reading →