The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - How to Use Claude's Massive New Upgrades
Episode Date: March 25, 2026Claude’s latest updates aren’t just incremental—they fundamentally change how you interact with AI, shifting from tool to always-on execution layer. This episode breaks down the biggest new capa...bilities across Claude Code and Claude Cowork, including remote control, dispatch, channels, scheduled tasks, and full computer use, with a focus on what they actually enable and how to start using them in practice. Claude updates checklist: https://play.aidailybrief.ai/episodes/how-to-use-claudes-massive-new-upgrades/Brought to you by:KPMG – Agentic AI is powering a potential $3 trillion productivity shift, and KPMG’s new paper, Agentic AI Untangled, gives leaders a clear framework to decide whether to build, buy, or borrow—download it at www.kpmg.us/NavigateMercury - Modern banking for business and now personal accounts. Learn more at https://mercury.com/personal-bankingRecall - The API for meeting recording. Get Get started today with $100 in free credits at https://www.recall.ai/aidbAIUC-1 - Get your agents certified to communicate trust to enterprise buyers - https://www.aiuc-1.com/Blitzy - Want to accelerate enterprise software development velocity by 5x? https://blitzy.com/AssemblyAI - The best way to build Voice AI apps - https://www.assemblyai.com/briefRobots & Pencils - Cloud-native AI solutions that power results https://robotsandpencils.com/The Agent Readiness Audit from Superintelligent - Go to https://besuper.ai/ to request your company's agent readiness score.The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614Our Newsletter is BACK: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/Interested in sponsoring the show? sponsors@aidailybrief.ai
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Today on the AI Daily Brief, how to use all of Claude's massive new upgrades.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
All right, friends, quick announcements before we dive in.
First of all, thank you to today's sponsors, Recall.A.I, assembly, prompt QL, and Blitzy.
To get an ad-free version of the show, go to patreon.com.com slash AI Daily Brief,
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To learn about sponsoring the show, send us a note at Spons.
at AID Daily Brief.aI. We are getting very close to full with Q2 spots, so if you're promoting,
for example, a launch or anything in the near future, it is definitely a good time to reach out.
Now, one more note on today's show. Yesterday was kind of a big politics and society episode.
Today we're running all the way in the other direction with something a lot more practical.
There have been so many new things that have come out for Claude and Claude Coat Co-work,
that it was time to go through them all, and it ended up running quite long,
so we will end up not doing the headlines today. We will be back with a normal headlines
episode tomorrow. Two more things to quickly flag before we get into that. First, Agent Madness is
live. The round of 64 is going. Hundreds of you have voted. And voting will close for this first round
at the end of the day on Thursday, March 26th. So go to Agent Madness.A.I. to check that out.
And finally, I'm noticing that I'm doing a lot more little companion experiences with these episodes.
And so as of today, we're launching Play.a.ailydief.a.i. which is where all of those fun
little experiences live. So for example, today, you can find the checklist.
of things to try with Claude right now, and again, that'll live at play.aiddailybrief.aI.
With all that out of the way, let's talk about all the cool new things you can do with Claude.
Every other day or so for the last month, there has been some part of the headlines where
Claude launched some new feature or upgrade for Claude Code or co-worker or some other part of
the Cloud ecosystem. And at this point, it has officially gotten to the point where we needed to do
a full-on retrospective of everything that has launched over the last month or so to help you
guys map out and figure out how to use all of these big new upgrades. Now, of course, this comes
in a specific lineage of updates. Step one was the models. The Opus 4-5-GPt52 generation of models that
came about at the end of last year catapulted us into a new capability era that Opus 46, GPT-53
codex and GPT-54 have continued. Step two, of course, was the unlock that OpenClaw represented.
It was a harness that brought with it a whole bunch of concepts and user interaction patterns
and behavior sets that made building your own agents and agent teams all of a sudden more viable
and more realistic. Step three has been the absolute race ever since OpenClaw blew up to bring those
types of features to all the other AI products. This clawification trend has been one of the big
themes ever since OpenClawn launched. Now, when OpenClawn founder Peter Steinberger was hired by
OpenAI, some people jumped in to say that Anthropic had made a big goof by not bringing him over
there. Others' response was a little bit closer to, I don't know, man, let's let him cook.
and see what happens. And certainly you have to think that the people saying let them cook are
feeling pretty vindicated right now. The clawification of Claude, maybe we'll call it the
clodification, kicked off at the end of February with remote control. Remote control was a way to
bring Claude specifically to your mobile experience. Both the mobile capabilities of OpenClaught,
as well as its ability to bridge between different types of devices, where some of the parts of that
system that people were most excited about, and so it wasn't all that surprising to see Claude Code jump on that first.
more, even outside of OpenClaugh, this is such a natural extension of the product that you
got to imagine that this would have happened anyway. The way that remote control works is that
you start your task in your Claude Code terminal session, and then you can pick it up and continue
working from your phone. Now, there's nothing happening in the cloud here. Basically, when you've
started that remote control session on your machine, Claude is going to continue to run locally
that entire time. That gives remote control the ability to use your full environment, including
your file system, MCP servers, tools, and product configurations, and you can go back and forth
interchangeably. In the docs, they write, unlike Claude Code on the web, which runs on cloud
infrastructure, remote control sessions run directly on your machine and interact with your local
file system. The web and mobile interfaces are just a window into that local session. There are
three ways to start a remote control session. You can start a dedicated remote control server
by navigating to the specific project directory you want to work on, and running the Cloud Remote
Control command. From there, Cloud will display a session URL that you can use to connect from another
device. You can also press your spacebar to get a QR code that you can access from your phone.
An interactive session basically means that you have your option of going back between
using terminal as you normally would with cloud code or using the remote session.
So basically the difference with server mode is that on server mode, you're just using your mobile
device to control cloud code, whereas interactive you can go back and forth.
Finally, if you are already in a cloud code session and you want to move to remote, you can
use the slash remote control command or slash RC, and this is going to once again display either a
URL or QR code that you can use to connect from another device.
First impressions were positive. Prominent solopreneur Peter Levels wrote,
Claude Remote Control is extremely nice. Can edit on MacOS or iOS and Cloud App on my production
server from anywhere. He basically compared it favorably to an SSH session, which would be another
more technically complex way to log into your local device to control it while on the go.
Roman Mirzoyan writes,
Yesterday I fixed two bugs and then released an app update to the App Store without
touching my laptop and having a walk for half a day. Now, as time has gone on, people
started to realize that this was a bigger shift that they might have originally thought.
Gaginsaloolyu writes,
Claude Code Remote Control just clicked for me.
You kick off a task in the terminal, then pick it up from your phone on a walk.
That's not a productivity feature.
That's a relationship shift.
You stop thinking of it as a tool you operate and start thinking of it as something you delegate
to and check in with.
Different mental model entirely.
I think that that's right, and I think that most people are still just slowly coming to that
realization, because it's one you kind of have to live, not just hear about.
Next up, a couple weeks later, we got a different way to interact with Claude from afar.
This feature was for Claude Co-Work and called Dispatch.
Anthropics Felix Reesberg writes,
We're shipping a new feature in Claude Co-Work as a research preview that I'm excited about.
Dispatch.
One persistent conversation with Claude that runs on your computer.
Message it from your phone, come back to finished work.
Felix then went on to explain a little bit further.
Because it's co-work, he writes,
Claude runs code in a sandbox on your machine.
Your files stay local.
You approve what Claude touches before it acts.
It feels pretty magical to give Claude a mission on my computer and get occasional updates like creating reports from internal dashboards or finding me a better seat on my next flight.
Everything Claude can do on your computer, files, browsers, tools are reachable from wherever you are.
Now one constraint, Felix writes is that your desktop has to be running.
ClaudeCodeCode PM Noah Zweben also talked about dispatch.
Coolest abilities, he writes.
One, send files from local machines so you can work on PowerPoints on the go.
Two, spawn sub-sessions on desktop that you can drill down on.
three, chat about any local co-work session.
In the docs, they explain a little bit more about how this works.
Anthropic writes,
Instead of starting a new session for each task,
you have a single persistent thread with Claude.
This thread doesn't reset.
Claude retains context from previous tasks
so you can pick up where you left off.
Message Claude from your phone on the way to work,
then follow up from your desktop when you sit down.
It's the same conversation, same context, wherever you reach it.
When you assign a task,
Claude figures out what kind of work is needed
and spins up the right session.
Development tasks run in Claude code, knowledge work runs in co-work.
These sessions appear in their respective sidebars.
You can click into any session for details or wait for the result in the thread.
Claude messages you the outcome, a spreadsheet, a memo, a comparison table, a pull request,
rather than showing you every step of the process.
You'll get a push notification on your phone when a task is done or when Claude needs your go-ahead.
Now, like with remote control, the power users who really started to dig into dispatch
found that it was not just a shift in scale, but a shift in kind.
Pavelle Huron writes,
Dispatch didn't fill my dead time.
It changed how I structured my day.
I went to the jump arena with my kid because I could direct work
acing from the sidelines.
The model isn't grind during gaps.
It's designed your day differently because the work runs without you sitting in front of it.
He also wrote an article after 48 hours of experimenting.
And one thing that he points out is that dispatch is not clawed chat on your phone.
Dispatch he writes is an orchestrator.
From a single conversation on your phone,
you spawn and manage multiple co-work tasks sessions running simultaneously on
your desktop. Each session runs independently, its own context, its own file access, its own connectors.
Your phone is the command chair. Your desktop does the heavy lifting. Think of the difference
between texting someone a request and sitting in a control room with multiple screens. Each screen
is a task session running on your desktop. Your phone directs them all from one conversation
thread. So what are the types of tasks he did? During morning coffee at home, Pavel started with,
pull the latest competitor updates and summarize changes since last week, as well as draft
the sponsor collaboration page using Notion Database. While he was walking the dog, he checked
task one, the competitor summary. He followed up with added comparison table against our current
roadmap. The redirect, he points out, took 10 seconds one-handed. While in the passenger seat with his
wife driving, he reviewed the new sponsor Notion page. Too formal, he said, pull the engagement
metrics from the last campaign and make the value proposition sharper. He also started task three
gap analysis on the article draft. While at the jump arena with his kids, he started working on
infographic iterations. Move the icons left, change the color of the third section.
Finally, went back at his desk. Everything was waiting, and he reviewed, adjusted, and shipped.
Ultimately, he writes, the actual direction time across all of these gaps was maybe 25 minutes
total. The clawed execution running in parallel was three plus hours of work. Even Malik also had a
positive experience with dispatch. He writes, after using it a bit, clawed co-work dispatch covers
90% of what I was trying to use OpenClaw for, but feels far less likely to upload my entire drive
to a malware site. What I like best,
better, he writes, easy, much more stable and safe.
Existing connectors mean better integration with Gmail, browsers, et cetera, very good tool use.
What's missing for me?
The ability to invite Claude to any channel, the heartbeat and proactivity, and the multiple sessions.
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Now, if that was all, that would already be a huge amount of new interactive modalities to ingest and change how we were interacting with Claude Co-work and Claude Code.
But we are not done yet. Next up, we got ClaudeCode channels, which is basically Claude CodCode's answer to the open-claw interaction of talking to it via telegram.
Anthropics Terik writes,
We just released ClaudeCode channels, which allows you to control your Claude Code session through select MCPs, starting with Telegram and Discord.
In the docs, they write, a channel is an MCP server that pushes events into your running Claude code session, so Claude can react to things that happen while you're not at the terminal.
Channels can be two-way.
Claude reads the event and replies back through the same channel like a chat bridge.
Unlike integrations that spawn a fresh cloud session or wait to be pulled, the event arrives in the session you already have open.
When Larry Vales asked,
How is this better than dispatch?
Or it's just an alternative to dispatch?
Tariq writes,
we want to give you a lot of different options
on how you talk to Claude remotely.
Channels is more focused on devs
who want something hackable.
Now, just to add a little bit of clarity here,
we see Telegram,
and we just think about ourselves chatting with Claude Code.
But the whole idea of channels
is that it's not just chats from you.
Yes, that is one type of interaction,
but you can also connect to other services,
like, for example, Sentry Monitoring,
directly to Claude code via those channels in telegram or Discord,
so that Claude can react even while you're not there.
Damien Galarza writes,
instead of Claude pulling data via tool calls,
channels push events into the session from the outside.
CI failures, webhook payloads, monitoring alerts,
chat messages from telegram or Discord.
Anything that can send in post can now reach your running session.
And it definitely seems like, of these,
channels is on the farthest end of the technical spectrum.
Dario on Twitter writes,
If you missed it, channels are essentially MCP servers that push events into a Claude
session, letting Claude react to the outside world beyond the terminal.
This was the exact missing piece I needed for an idea I've been brewing.
My goal was twofold.
Build a custom orchestration system to spawn Claude Code sessions anywhere, Docker, VMs,
pods are locally on my MacBook, and then create a custom app across MacOS, iOS, and iPadOS
to control these agents on the go.
Fast forward to today, just four days after, channels dropped, and the iOS app is already
up and running.
I have so many more ideas on how to tweak and expand this to fit my exact workflow.
Now, at this point, you'd be forgiven for getting a little confused because we're talking about
all these new ways to use Claude Co-work and Claude Code remotely, all with slight variations
on the theme.
This is kind of why you're going to want to go hack at all of these to understand how they
fit your own use cases.
But I think one big takeaway is an aggregate, massive shift in how Anthropic is imagining
how you're going to be working with Claude in the future.
And effectively, the idea is an always-on, context-maintain.
persistent, interactive, orchestration experience, where work is happening all the time even
when you're not doing it, with the right way to interact with that work from wherever you are
and whatever your use case is. In addition to those features, we also saw Anthropic go after
parity with OpenClaw when it came to scheduling tasks. At the end of February, co-work got scheduled
tasks, think a morning briefing, weekly spreadsheet updates, or Friday team presentations.
Then about a week and a half later, we got local scheduled tasks in CloudCode Desktop.
Tarek said that his favorite use case is to ask it to check error logs every few hours and create PRs for any actionable errors.
Now, because these tasks are local, they run as long as your computer is awake, but then a couple weeks after that, we got recurring cloud-based tasks.
Noah's We've been again, writes, set a repo or repos, a schedule and a prompt.
Claude runs it via cloud infra on your schedule so you don't need to keep Claude code running on your local machine.
He said that so far the cloud code team had found it useful for things like sweeping through open PRs, building features for
approved issues, analyzing CI failures overnight, and syncing docs based on newly merged PRs.
And if you're wondering if this had to do with OpenClaugh, in another tweet, Noah said,
some might say I built this because I couldn't figure out how to set up my Mac Mini.
And yet, in terms of sheer consumer excitement, all of these were just prelude to what was
announced on Monday night.
The official Claude account on Twitter writes, you can now enable Claude to use your computer
to complete tasks.
It opens your app, navigates your browser, fills in spread,
sheets, anything you'd do sitting at your desk. About 16 hours after that tweet went live,
40 million people have viewed it. Sixty-two thousand people have bookmarked it, and the chatter is
overwhelming. Anthropics Felix Reesberg writes, today we're releasing a feature that allows
Claude to control your computer, mouse, keyboard, and screen, giving it the ability to use any app.
Now, he also points out that these features shouldn't be viewed in isolation. Felix writes,
I believe this is especially useful if used with dispatch, which allows you to remotely control Claude on
your computer while you're away. In their announcement blog, Anthropic writes,
when Claude doesn't have access to the tools it needs, it will point, click, and navigate
what's on your screen to perform the task itself. It can open files, use the browser, and run
dev tools automatically with no setup required. When using your computer, they say,
Claude will reach for the most precise tool first, starting with existing connectors to
services like Slack or Google Calendar. However, when Claude finds that there is not a connector
set up, it can control browser, mouse, keyboard, and screen to complete different tasks. Now, as you
might be thinking right now, this kind of supercharges those features like dispatch. Anthropic
agrees, writing, with dispatch you can tell Claude to automatically check your emails every morning
or pull some metrics every week, or spin up a Claude co-work or Claude code session for a report
or a pull request. Claude's new computer use capability makes dispatch even more helpful.
Now, Claude can use your computer on your behalf while you're away. For example, to create a
morning briefing while you're on the train, make changes in your IDE, run tests, and put up a PR,
or keep your 3D printing project moving according to your initial plan.
A lot of the initial response was fairly breathless.
Swee, Bertabo writes,
Claude can now control your entire computer with one prompt, forever.
You tell it, scan my email every morning once, and it just does it, forever.
It can also open apps, edit spreadsheets, move files, batch process, 150 photos in Photoshop,
export PDFs, all of it.
You can also start a task from your phone, go to dinner, come back to finish work like nothing happened.
Anthropic is giving us the full desktop agent that uses the actual screen, mouse, and keyboard.
Not a sandbox, not a simulation.
your real Jarvis. This is absolutely insane. The LLM era is over. Gagin again, who we heard from
earlier, writes, been testing it in co-work mode. The thing that gets me isn't the automation.
It's that it figures out what you actually meant when you said handle this for me. That's the shift.
Bielala writes, Claude is no longer just a tool that uses the computer, it operates inside it as a
true execution layer. It can replicate everything a human does. Mouse movements, keyboard input,
screen interaction. It can open any application, navigate through it and produce
the exact output you want. This goes beyond APIs. This is full real-world system control,
which means from anywhere you can control your devices and automate workflows end-to-end.
In terms of examples, a lot of people started fairly simply. Gavin Purcell writes,
Okay, this is pretty cool. Just had it grab a photo off my desktop from afar.
Dumb and simple, yes, but done in natural language with no weird setup.
Daniel San writes,
I don't like posting about anything I haven't tried myself, so I saw the announcement that
Claude Dispatch now controls your computer, and I simply asked it to open Twitter and like a
Claude Post. Done. This is getting more interesting and more dangerous by the minute. Adit Sheath
writes, this is the first time a mainstream AI product actually behaves like a junior
ops hire that lives on your laptop. And Peter Gustav points out that this could be especially
valuable for corporates stuck in legacy software that isn't going to port into AI ecosystems
natively. He writes, this is another domino to fall, computer use of arbitrary apps, not just
your browser. This is a big deal for a lot of corporates who have custom crappy apps from 20 or 30 years
ago. And summing it all up, Boxes Aaron Levy argues that this is, to put it simply a big deal.
In a long post on Twitter, he writes,
Computer use and the ability to write and run code on the fly are the ultimate primitives for
agents to be able to take on more and more tasks and knowledge work. Most work requires
hopping between multiple applications and working with broad sets of data in a workflow,
and agents will need to be able to reverse these systems to be able to effectively automate
any real work in the enterprise. Now we will have agents that are the equivalent of having an
expert programmer or any number of them that can write code or use any API to automate whatever
work you're doing. Agents will have access to either a user's computer and resources or their
own sandbox to operate in and be able to pull together the tools necessary to perform the task at
hand. This opens up the broadest set of agendic use cases. To be sure, there are going to be
various hurdles around security, permissions and access control, identity challenges, and more.
For instance, should the agent always act on behalf of the user, or should they have their own
identity and limited set of access rights. How do you triage security events when historically
volume of activity on a system is no longer a reliable signal of a security issue? How do you ensure
the agent isn't going rogue or getting prompt injected to do something risky? All problems that
need to get figured out. Then there's also lots of work needed to ensure software is set up to enable
agents to operate with their tools in a headless fashion. This will be an uncomfortable reality
for some incumbents and equally a welcome one for tools that historically have operated seamlessly
via APIs and have business models to support this.
Lots of change coming in the world of work agents, and it's going to get pretty wild.
Now, we're already going pretty long, but I want to point out that this is not the end of
what has been pushed over the last month. Running quickly through some of the second tier
and quality of life type of announcements, one big complaint that lots of folks have had about
co-work is that there wasn't a conception of a project. Now there is, which will make a huge difference
for day-to-day functionality. Also in March, the Claude Code team launched Code Review,
where, as they put it, Claude dispatches a team of agents to hunt for bugs.
This past month, the 1 million token context window
actually became available generally for both Claude Opus and Claude Sonnet.
Why Combinators Carrie Tan wrote,
I underestimated how powerful Opus 4.6 with 1 million tokens is.
Even last year, we were absolutely hitting context limit problems constantly.
1 million tokens mean you can do much more complex analysis entirely in context.
Claude code is so much better.
Meanwhile, over in the main Claude app,
Claude can now build interactive charts and diagrams, and we also got upgrades for Cloud for Excel
and Cloud for PowerPoint, including the ability to integrate them together. They write,
When you've got more than one file open, Claude shares the full context of your conversation between them.
Pull data from spreadsheets, build out tables, and updated deck without re-explaining a step.
Skills are also now available inside the Excel and PowerPoint add-ins,
meaning that when your team has some standard workflow, like running a variance analysis or building a client deck,
you can save that as a skill.
Other people in your organization can then run it in one click from their own sidebar.
For my free users out there, memory and connectors are now both available on the free plan,
and we also got a whole plug-in marketplace for enterprise customers.
One implication of this is that it's pushing a lot of people to think differently about just how
productive a small team can be.
Ethan Malik again writes,
The ability of the clawed team to learn from things like OpenClaw and implement features like
this on a daily basis is a very strong argument that,
for AI-powered coding teams, a very different software development process is possible with large
strategic implications. I think for most of us, though, it's just a big old checklist of things
we need to try. So to quickly sum up, we've got computer use, which allows Claude to control
your computer, doing things even in non-native apps, dispatch which allows you to initiate sessions
and orchestrate tasks from Claude Co-work from your phone, remote control, which allows you
to interact with Claude code while on the go, channels which allow you to port events impacting your
software automatically into cloud code via channels like telegram and Discord, and scheduled tasks,
which allow you to have things happening in co-work or cloud, on a scheduled basis either locally
or in the cloud. Now, for those of you who want to keep track of this simply, you can go find
this checklist with links to information about all these features at play.aidilybreath.aI.aI.com,
so many episodes now have these little companion experiences that I'm going to just be putting
them there. Again, that's play.aidilydelybrief.A.i. For now, however, that is going to do it for this
episode of the AI Daily Brief. Appreciate you listening or watching, as always, and go have some fun with Claude.
Peace.
