Has anyone created and shared openclaw skills for Tiller?
I haven’t seen anything about that AI tool, but heather posted this last month in regards to AI integration coming:
And I have seen a few posts about gemini and claude.
Claude Cowork just reworked and improved my budget.
I copied three tabs from my Foundations workbook, pointed Claude Cowork at the file, and issued the following prompt:
“The attached spreadsheet contains financial transitions on one tab and expense & income categories and monthly budget amounts on another tab. One problem is many of the monthly budget amounts assume levelized monthly expenses or income where in actual practice the monthly amounts can vary considerably. I would like you to review the actual transactions from 2025 and create new monthly budget values for each category of income and spending for each month of the year whenever an individual monthly amount varies from the average monthly amount by more than 30%. Put the new recommended monthly budget values in a new tab in the spreadsheet.”
I used the Opus 4.6 model. Cowork accomplished the task in about 3 minutes with no errors. I reviewed the results and copy/pasted about 75% of the new budget values into my active foundations Categories sheet.
Next, I asked it to …
“Take a look at my spending and income categories. Do you have any recommendations on ways to restructure the categories? Keep in mind, I use the categories not only to track the past but also to forecast the future.”
Claude recommended 9 changes, 5 or 6 of which I plan to implement. Here is an example of one I will implement:
4. Consolidate your investment income categories.
You have 8 separate income categories for investment returns: Dividends and Interest each split four ways (IRA, Roth, HSA, taxable). For tracking the past, this granularity matters at tax time. But for forecasting, what matters is the total expected investment income and whether it’s taxable. I’d suggest consolidating to three: “Investment Income (tax-deferred)” combining IRA dividends + interest, “Investment Income (tax-free)” combining Roth + HSA, and “Investment Income (taxable)” combining taxable dividends + interest + cap gains. You’d still see the account-level detail in your transaction history, but your forecast would be simpler and more meaningful. The “Hide” flags on Dividend (HSA) and Interest (Roth) suggest you’re already finding the granularity excessive.
All in all, Claude Cowork helped me improve my budgeting and financial tracking process with minimal effort.
Interesting. I will try this.