It’s a quiet rainy Sunday, and I’m pretty tired, so I thought now would be a good time to write up a little blog post.
The first thing on my mind: more experimenting with Claude Cowork. My most recent mini-project was to see if I could hook Claude up to my email. Claude has a built-in connector for Gmail, but of course that’s not what I use. I use Fastmail. I spent a fair bit of time looking at various MCP options. In in end, I went with this one. There are a few ways to get it working, but I went with the simplest one (I think): adding it into Claude Desktop as a Claude Desktop Extension (DXT). That worked well.
I haven’t really done much with it yet. I have a few ideas though. I keep coming back to the idea of some kind of “daily briefing” out of Claude, combining info from my Obsidian vault (tasks), email (newsletters), and news pulled from the web. But I haven’t really gotten far with that.
I just tried this prompt: “Please look at the Receipts folder in my email and find all emails from Kobo. Then make me a list of all the books I’ve bought from Kobo, including title, author, and purchase date. Also, indicate which ones are audiobooks.”
That took a while, but worked pretty well. If I didn’t already have a list of all those books in Obsidian, I could have dumped it into there. I do note that the search took longer than I think it should have; it may be that the MCP I’m using isn’t terribly efficient? Or Claude isn’t using it efficiently? I don’t know.
One thing I’m noticing in my efforts to find good use cases for Claude Cowork: A lot of the stuff that would qualify as “quick wins” doesn’t really help me, because it’s all about information organization, and I’m already really fussy about that stuff. I started watching a video the other day showing how Claude Cowork could sort out a folder full of random documents. The example input folder was full of files named “document.pdf” and “document (2).pdf” and “attachment (3).pdf”. Useless file names, basically. I wouldn’t be able to sleep at night if I had a folder like that! My bank statements for the last ten years are all stored in folders by year and consistently named like “statement-yyyy-mm-dd.pdf”. Same with credit card statements, phone bills, and so on. So Claude can’t help me there!
Another semi-useful thing I did recently was to pull the annotations from a a book I just finished on my Kobo and reformat them into a nice Markdown file and save it into Obsidian. I use the annotations plugin for Calibre to pull annotations from Kobo books. For Kobo books purchased from the Kobo store, you can export annotations from your account, but for EPUBs that you load yourself, there’s no supported way to pull them. For those, the annotations plugin works, but it’s far from perfect. The annotations show in the book’s metadata in Calibre. They’re in an HTML format, and they’re shown in semi-random order. So that’s frustrating. Claude managed to convert the HTML into clean Markdown, and sort the annotations back into proper order. So I think I’ll be doing that again.
I’ve thought about turning that into a skill, so I can keep using it and get consistent results, but I asked Claude if I should, and it said not to bother. So we’ll see how it works next time. If I see any inconsistency or I can think of stuff I want to tweak with it, I’ll give the skill thing another thought.
So that’s it for random Claude stuff for today. I had to work late on Friday, then all day Saturday, on a server virtualization project, so I should really just be relaxing today and not thinking about computers.