I built a custom Slack inbox. It was easier than you’d think. | Yash Tekriwal (Clay)
How I AI8 Huhti

I built a custom Slack inbox. It was easier than you’d think. | Yash Tekriwal (Clay)

Yash Tekriwal is the head of education at Clay. A self-described hyper-optimizer, Yash has built multiple custom productivity applications using Perplexity Computer and OpenClaw to manage his overwhelming daily workflow—including a Slack digest system that categorizes over 150 daily notifications into actionable priorities, and a consolidated news/email/Slack dashboard that serves as his personal command center.


What you’ll learn:

  1. How Yash built a custom Slack digest that categorizes 150+ daily notifications into action-required, need-to-read, and FYI buckets
  2. Why Perplexity Computer beats Claude Code and Codex for building personal productivity apps
  3. His “anti-to-do list” framework: spending an hour daily automating tasks you never want to do again
  4. How to use AI for deterministic tasks (APIs, structured data) vs. subjective tasks (categorization, summarization)
  5. Why the SaaS apocalypse narrative is wrong—and why we’re about to see an explosion of micro-software
  6. How his team uses Perplexity Computer to prototype design systems and communicate with cross-functional partners

Brought to you by:

Guru—The AI layer of truth

ThoughtSpot—Build AI-powered analytics into your product

In this episode, we cover:

(00:00) Introduction to Yash

(02:38) The burden of 150 daily Slack notifications

(05:45) When to use AI for tasks vs. building deterministic code

(06:38) Building the Slack digest with OpenClaw

(11:33) Introducing Perplexity Computer and the visual dashboard

(14:28) Three reasons Perplexity Computer beats Claude Code

(16:14) Using connectors to automate meeting follow-ups across Notion and Asana

(18:21) The Kanban-style Slack dashboard

(20:15) The long tail of customer requests and the future of micro-software

(24:09) The anti-to-do list framework

(26:21) Building a consolidated news, email, and Slack digest

(29:48) How Perplexity Computer handles authentication and deployment

(31:46) Team use case: Prototyping persona-based learning journeys for Clay University

(35:49) Lightning round and final thoughts

Tools referenced:

• Perplexity Computer: https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/new

• OpenClaw: https://openclaw.ai/

• Discord: https://discord.com/

• Claude Code: https://claude.ai/code

• Codex: https://openai.com/codex/

• Asana: https://asana.com/

• Airtable: https://airtable.com/

• Figma: https://www.figma.com/

• Vercel: https://vercel.com/

• ChatGPT: https://chat.openai.com/

Other references:

• Slack: https://slack.com/

• Notion: https://www.notion.so/

• Superhuman: https://superhuman.com/

• Clay University: https://www.clay.com/university

• Kanban boards: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanban_board

Where to find Yash Tekriwal:

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yashtekriwal/

X: https://x.com/yash_tek

Company: https://www.clay.com/

Where to find Claire Vo:

ChatPRD: https://www.chatprd.ai/

Website: https://clairevo.com/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/clairevo/

X: https://x.com/clairevo

Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email jordan@penname.co.

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(93)

This solo builder runs 24/7 local AI on his own hardware | Alex Finn

This solo builder runs 24/7 local AI on his own hardware | Alex Finn

Alex Finn is an AI builder, YouTuber, and the creator of Vibe Code Academy, a community for people learning to build with AI tools. He runs one of the most ambitious local AI setups I’ve come across: ...

13 Heinä 35min

GPT-5.6 Sol vs. Claude Fable: Why OpenAI’s new model crushes my benchmark

GPT-5.6 Sol vs. Claude Fable: Why OpenAI’s new model crushes my benchmark

GPT-5.6 Sol is back, and I ran it through my full How I AI vibe benchmark against GPT-5.6 Terra, Luna, Claude Fable 5, and Sonnet 5 across five categories: PRDs, prototypes, wireframes, debugging, and...

9 Heinä 36min

What a harness is and how to build one with Claude Agent SDK

What a harness is and how to build one with Claude Agent SDK

Everybody is saying, “It’s not the model, it’s the harness,” but almost nobody stops to explain what a harness actually is. So I did. I built one live on the show: a Sentry bug-debugging harness for m...

8 Heinä 24min

How I run autonomous coding agents from my phone with OpenAI Symphony + Linear | Alessio Fanelli (Kernel Labs)

How I run autonomous coding agents from my phone with OpenAI Symphony + Linear | Alessio Fanelli (Kernel Labs)

Alessio Fanelli, founder of Kernel Labs and co-host of Latent Space podcast, walks us through two very different AI workflows: (1) a fully autonomous coding setup using OpenAI Symphony + Linear, where...

6 Heinä 35min

Sonnet 5 review: I ran 64 generations to find out if it's worth it

Sonnet 5 review: I ran 64 generations to find out if it's worth it

I’ve been testing every major frontier model release since the start of the year, and when Anthropic dropped Sonnet 5, I wanted more than a vibe check. I got tired of one-off tests I couldn’t repeat o...

30 Kesä 25min

No Figma. No Jira. No docs. How Gusto built a new product line with Claude Code | Eddie Kim (CTO)

No Figma. No Jira. No docs. How Gusto built a new product line with Claude Code | Eddie Kim (CTO)

Eddie Kim is the co-founder and CTO of the payroll and HR platform Gusto, which just crossed $1 billion in revenue and serves more than 500,000 small businesses. Recently he did something most CTOs do...

29 Kesä 51min

GLM 5.2: why I’m replacing Opus in Claude Code with this new model

GLM 5.2: why I’m replacing Opus in Claude Code with this new model

I put GLM 5.2, the open-weight coding model from Z.AI, through four real tasks inside my actual codebase: a codebase architecture audit, a UI redesign, and a 45-minute autonomous bug-hunting session p...

24 Kesä 27min

How Claude Mythos found a 15-year-old bug in Mozilla Firefox | Brian Grinstead

How Claude Mythos found a 15-year-old bug in Mozilla Firefox | Brian Grinstead

Brian Grinstead is a distinguished engineer at Mozilla, where he’s worked on Firefox and the web platform since 2013 (he joined to help launch Firefox DevTools). Recently he and his team pointed an ag...

22 Kesä 48min