Most families do not have a password problem.
They have an access problem.
One person knows everything.
The other person gets stuck when something urgent happens.
That’s exactly why I wrote The Family Password Playbook:
https://t.co/WsSPjdAJEh
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I just earned a commission using EzProfits — a simple online system. No tech skills needed, you just share their stuff and they pay you. Sign up and try it yourself: https://t.co/JwxCdafHxw
I just earned a commission using EzProfits — a simple online system. No tech skills needed, you just share their stuff and they pay you. Sign up and try it yourself: https://t.co/JwxCdafHxw
I just earned a commission using EzProfits — a simple online system. No tech skills needed, you just share their stuff and they pay you. Sign up and try it yourself: https://t.co/JwxCdafHxw
Sunday is a good day to ask a simple AI question:
“What task do I keep avoiding because it has too many tiny steps?”
That’s where agents become useful.
Not replacing judgment. Not magic.
Just turning repeatable friction into a workflow you can run again.
The best use of AI for most people isn’t replacing their job. It’s removing the 20 small admin tasks they keep avoiding. Emails, lists, follow-ups, research, drafts, reminders. That’s where the time comes back.
@sharbel This is the kind of guide Hermes needed.
The framework is powerful, but the real unlock is understanding how memory, skills, tools, scheduling, and messaging fit together in actual workflows.
Doesn't stop at the acceptance letter.
We chose the University of Rhode Island.
Once we picked URI. Claude built a 46-task checklist covering every deadline from deposit to move-in.
Fall 2026, fully mapped.
To any parent starting the college search:
We applied to 15. Got into 12. Made a top 3. Picked 1.
Use Claude. Seriously.
Essay feedback. Comparing aid packages. Drafting appeals. Tracking deadlines.
Difference between drowning in it and running the process.
A lot of people want AI to replace work.
I think the better use is making good work easier to start and easier to finish.
That is a much more practical goal.
The most useful way to think about AI is not:
“What can this tool do?”
It is:
“What repeated friction in my life or work should no longer exist?”
That question leads to much better use cases.
Most families do not have a password problem.
They have an access problem.
One person knows everything.
The other person gets stuck when something urgent happens.
That is fixable.
I wrote more about this here:
https://t.co/91s4llY2Hh
One of the most underrated family risks is digital confusion during stressful moments.
Bills, email, logins, subscriptions, devices.
When one person holds all the access, the whole family is more fragile than it looks.