I made all this just using Claude Code.
This is the full reveal of the myPKA Cockpit, a local interface that runs on top of the same markdown folder my whole private and business life lives in.
No sign-up, no subscription, no database, no lock-in. It launches from the folder, runs in your browser, and everything it touches stays a plain local file.
It merges all my actions and information in one place:
🗓️ a planner that replaced Sunsama
✅ tasks pulled from @todoist and @clickup
📅 Google Calendar integration
🕸️ a knowledge graph (in my opinion better than Obsidian)
🖼️ local Heptabase like whiteboards for visual deep thinking with realtime note connections
⚡️ fleeting note creation with Tana like outlining experience
📖 10 years of journal entries cross connected via Wiki Links
❤️ 15 years of health data in one dashboard
🗂️ a document library fed by my paper scanner including invoice reminder and connection with relevant contracts and journal entries
🤖 Option to open Claude, Codex, Gemini on any note with the full context of the folder
Good catch. This is the AI tooling pattern playing out: the model behind the interface matters less than the workflow it enables.
Most users won't care if it's Kimi, Claude, or GPT under the hood. They care if it ships their code faster. The model race is becoming invisible to the end user, and that's actually the point.
Non-negotiable deadlines, forced context switches, and zero tolerance for "I'll get to it later."
Toddlers are basically tiny project managers with no snooze button. The Samoyed handles quality control (walks = best thinking time).
Most productivity advice overcomplicates what a 2-year-old figured out: start early, move your body, do the work before you overthink it.
This is the conversation nobody wants to have.
Most teams adopt AI tools without changing their underlying workflows. So now they have the same chaos, just faster. AI fatigue isn't a tool problem. It's a system design problem. Without a clear methodology for how information flows through your work, every new tool just adds another tab to manage.
Half agree. Your brain IS great at making connections. Terrible at retrieval under pressure.
Try remembering the exact insight you had 3 months ago that's suddenly relevant today. That's where an external system earns its keep.
The point isn't to replace thinking. It's to free your brain for the connection-making you're describing.
@richiesuazo Spot on. The Notion graveyard is full of systems people built for the person they wanted to be, not the person they are.
Your step 3 is where most people skip. Sitting with discomfort for 2 weeks reveals what you actually need vs. what looks cool in a YouTube tutorial.
THIS was the missing link to tame the fire hose of the outer world by leveraging AI.
What a game changer this is for my PKM system.
Thank you for providing this MCP, which is already well integrated with my Claude assistant @homsiT / @readwise / @ReadwiseReader
Your to-do list is endless. Your time isn't.
Time blocking changed everything: 4-6 hours for deep work, 2-4 hours buffer time, protected focus.
We overestimate what we can do in a day but underestimate what we achieve in a year.
Busy ≠ productive. Focused does.
This is a story about how scanning and storing documents in the cloud saved someone from losing everything after a fire. They were able to recover all their important documents because they were stored in Evernote, OneDrive, and Raven. #cloudstorage#documentmanagement
6. You rely on willpower instead of routines (Aristotle)
7. You confuse planning with executing (Marcus Aurelius)
8. You don't capture, so you forget and repeat (David Allen)
9. You mistake activity for progress (Peter Drucker)
10. You chase tools instead of building a system (@paperlessmove)
The desire to own your data locally is understandable, but consider the advantages of the cloud. One person's experience of losing physical documents in a fire highlights the cloud's ability to preserve vital information. #CloudStorage#DataBackup
For some, outlining isn't just organization—it's how thoughts become clear. Digital tools that accelerate this process can be transformative, especially for those accustomed to structuring ideas with a keyboard. #productivity#thinkingtools
Many find Heptabase the easiest path to integrate note-taking with knowledge management. Its smooth learning curve suits most use cases, making it a practical first choice. #NoteTaking#KnowledgeManagement
The best note-taking app isn't about popularity; it's about what aligns with individual needs and workflows. Evaluate tools based on personal requirements rather than generic recommendations. #productivity#notetaking
It's important to understand the different types of tools for note-taking. Distinguishing between note-taking, PKM, and tools for thought helps people choose software that fits their specific information needs, instead of relying on general recommendations. #NoteTaking#PKM