
Hi AInauts,
Welcome to the latest issue of your favorite newsletter.
One fascinating thing up front: Anthropic looked inside Claude this week and found a kind of internal scratchpad, where the model appears to reason without saying it out loud. They call it J-Space. Wild stuff, and strangely close to how humans sometimes work too.
The researchers could even trigger this silent thinking. When they swapped the word "spider" for "ant" in the middle of a task, Claude's answer shifted from eight legs to six.
We are learning more and more about how these models actually work, and someday that may help answer the never-ending question: can AI become conscious?
Interesting, yes. But for everyday work, today's practical topics matter more:
Claude Cowork on web and mobile: AI keeps working while your laptop is closed
Why we only use tools with MCP now, and why you should too
ποΈ Harari: AIs are born bureaucrats. A closing thought
Let's go.
This issue is presented by:

Claude Cowork on Web and Mobile: AI Keeps Working While Your Laptop Is Closed
Let's stay with Anthropic. Hundreds of AInauten readers have gone through our AI employee training and now work with Claude Cowork or Codex.
We do too, every day.
And if there was one complaint we kept hearing in live Q&As, it was this: Cowork was tied to your computer.
You had to sit at your desktop, your files had to be local, and when you closed your laptop, work stopped. For you and for the AI.
That changed this week.
Quick reminder if you do not know Cowork yet: it is the mode where Claude does not just chat with you, but actually works.
It can handle tasks across your tools and folders, create files, edit them, and work through lists.
An AI employee, basically. Not just a chatbot.
With the right instructions, it can do almost everything on your computer that you can do. Anthropic has now brought Cowork to web and mobile. Before this, it only lived in the desktop app.

This is not a tiny update. It changes how you work with it:
Cowork now runs in the cloud. Close the laptop, Claude keeps going.
You can start tasks from your phone, check in during the day, and pick up the result wherever you are.
Scheduled tasks can run without any of your devices being on.
To keep expectations straight, two honest caveats:
First: only the desktop app can touch your local files. In the cloud, Cowork continues with your connected tools, such as Google Drive, Mail, Calendar, the web, and so on. Not your hard drive.
Second: the rollout is happening now, first for Max users, with other plans following. If you do not see it yet, give it a few days.
How to Get Started With Claude Cowork
Simple: open the Claude desktop app or claude.ai, switch the input field from Chat to Cowork, and give it a task.
Then check from your phone with the app when you want to see progress. Just make sure you are on the latest app versions.

Our Take: This Is the Assistant Many People Have Been Waiting For
This is the assistant many people have wanted since the early days of AI.
One you can talk to from your phone, that knows your context and tools, and that keeps working while you are in a meeting, having lunch, spending time with people you love, or sleeping.
We are not fully there yet. But the direction is now impossible to miss.
Sure, technical people have been doing this for a while with Claude Code on a VPS or an always-on Mac mini.
But Claude Cowork is finally making it mass-market.
If you have not used this mode yet, this is a good moment to try it. It is a new way of working.
At the same time, this is the strongest argument for our next topic. Because when your Claude Cowork is connected to your tools through MCP, it can work for you even when you are not there.
Why We Only Use Tools With MCP Now, and Why You Should Too
We all work with a pile of software tools every day. Email, video editing, project management, websites, automation, and all the rest. Some tools we use a lot, some only once in a while.
Over the past few months, we have radically rebuilt our tool stack. And when we consider adding a new tool now, one condition has to be met: it needs an MCP.
Take Onepage, the website and funnel builder that has been our partner for a long time. Language note: Onepage is a German company, and the linked page is in German.
Two weeks ago, we showed you Onepage AI 2.0: you describe your page, the AI builds it section by section, and afterward you can adjust everything without code. Powerful, and very practical.
This is where the topic from above connects back in: the Onepage MCP.
Short version if you tune out when you hear "MCP": an MCP is a universal adapter for AI.
It connects your AI, for example Claude, directly with a tool so the agent can work inside it. No copy-paste, no back and forth, and you do not have to log in every single time.
For Onepage, that means you can build landing pages and complete funnels directly from Claude, Codex, and similar tools.
You say what you want in chat, and the page appears in your Onepage account.

Long-time readers know this pattern from us: our own servers are already connected to Claude, so the machine can access our websites and make changes directly.
But that setup is usually technical. With Onepage, this works out of the box.
And as always with Onepage: German company, GDPR-compliant, hosted in Germany.
Now comes the part that is the real game changer for us.
With most AI website builders, you get stuck once the machine is done. If you want to change a small thing afterward, you have to prompt again, explain your intent for the tenth time, and hope the AI does not break something else.
Not with Onepage. Everything Claude or the Onepage AI builds can still be edited by non-technical users in the visual editor. Click in, change text, recolor a button, swap an image, done. You are not at the mercy of the machine. You take the wheel whenever you want.
That is why Onepage is currently one of our favorite tools for landing pages and funnels for non-technical people. And MCP lifts it one level higher.
What does that look like in practice?
Here is the exact prompt we sent Claude:
Can you build an alternative newsletter homepage? You know our ainauten.com. Take a look and build a cool alternative in Onepage. Preferably inside the consulting project.That was it.
A few minutes later, a finished branded landing page was sitting in our Onepage account. Hero, claim, email field, numbers section, everything in the AInauten look. And anything we did not like could be changed with two clicks directly in the section, as shown on the left in the screenshot.
Why it works so quickly for us: Claude knows almost everything about us through our Second Brain. Our projects, our brand, our tone.
We did not have to explain what AInauten looks or sounds like. The machine already knew and poured it straight into Onepage through the MCP.
That is the real leverage in MCPs: your AI knows your context, and through MCP it can immediately turn that context into work inside your tools. From thought to finished page, without detour.
How to set up the Onepage MCP in two minutes:
In Claude, add a new connector and use this URL: https://mcp.onepage.io/

Then confirm once with your Onepage account that Claude is allowed to access it.

That's it. From then on, ask Claude: "What can you do for me in Onepage?" and get started. This does not only work with Claude, but with every AI tool that supports MCPs.
One detail we really liked: MCP usage does not count against the AI credits you otherwise buy from Onepage. That means you can work with AI without burning through your credit budget.
So if you build landing pages or funnels and you are not technical, this is currently the smartest path we know. You can try the whole thing for free here.
ποΈ Harari: AIs Are Born Bureaucrats
Let's close with one short thought experiment.
Yuval Noah Harari gave a talk at Oxford a few weeks ago that is now making the rounds online. The core thesis is not new; he has been telling versions of it for years. But rarely this sharply.
His logic: human power is based on mass cooperation. And mass cooperation runs through bureaucracy: law, finance, administration. All built from words.
And here is the point: AIs are born bureaucrats. No lawyer can memorize every law. An AI can.
That makes them perfect candidates to take over exactly these processes. In Harari's words: AI bankers decide on your loan, AI administrators decide on your university place, AI judges decide your sentence.
You do not have to share Harari's doom tone. We do not fully share it either, although we understand it more and more. The observation that AI first gains real power in invisible administrative processes, not with robots, resonates.
Our pragmatic take is familiar: this is exactly why it is worth understanding these systems now. If you can operate them, you do not just experience them passively.
If you have an hour this weekend, the talk is worth it.
That is it for today. See you in the next issue.
Thanks for being here. Until next week.
Reto & Fabian from AInauten



