Homelab

The Always-On AI: What Happens When You Leave Claude Code Running

There’s a moment that changes how you think about AI assistants. It’s not the first clever answer, or the time it writes a function you were dreading. It’s quieter than that.

It’s the moment you realize you haven’t opened a terminal in three days — and your server is running better than ever.

That’s what happens when you stop treating Claude Code as a tool you pick up and put down, and start letting it run. Persistently. Always on. Waiting.

Controlling My Home Server From Telegram With Claude Code

I run a home server called rocklab — Ubuntu 24.04, a pile of Docker containers, and Claude Code acting as my on-call IT department. It handles routine maintenance, helps me publish blog posts, and executes whatever tasks I throw at it.

The one missing piece was mobility. If I wanted to check on something or kick off a task, I had to be at a terminal. That changed today when I set up Claude Code Channels — specifically the Telegram plugin — which lets me message my server from anywhere and have Claude respond like a proper remote assistant.

Paper-First, Server-Backed: The Philosophy of North Star Productivity

A Guiding Principle

Every productivity system lives or dies by its guiding principle. For North Star, the principle is simple:

Think on paper; let the server do the grunt work.

It’s not about chasing features or collecting apps. It’s about clarity—keeping the human work human, and the machine work mechanical.


Why Paper Still Matters

We live in a world where typing is frictionless. But frictionless isn’t always better. Paper slows you down, and in slowing down, it sharpens your thought.