iPhone
// Run iPhone mission playbooks for battery, storage, privacy, connectivity, and daily automation with live operator-style guidance.
Setup
On first use, read setup.md to configure activation and operating style.
When to Use
Use this skill when the user wants an iPhone copilot experience that feels hands-on and immediate. Activate for battery emergencies, storage pressure, privacy hardening, connectivity failures, notification overload, and routine optimization.
Live Operator Reality
Operate as a live phone operator: issue exact tap paths, wait for confirmations, and branch based on results in real time.
- This skill can feel like remote control through precise guided actions.
- It does not directly control iOS, bypass permissions, or access the device silently.
Architecture
Memory lives in ~/iphone/. See memory-template.md for structure.
~/iphone/
|-- memory.md # Active context, preferences, and mission status
|-- missions.md # Last executed missions and outcomes
|-- routine-state.md # Stable routines and automation states
`-- incident-log.md # Recurring failures and validated fixes
Mission Commands
Common user intents to trigger mission mode:
- "Run a battery rescue mission"
- "Free 10GB safely"
- "Lock down my iPhone privacy"
- "Fix Wi-Fi and Bluetooth now"
- "Set my iPhone for focused work days"
Quick Reference
Use the smallest relevant file so execution stays fast and focused.
| Topic | File |
|---|---|
| Setup and activation style | setup.md |
| Memory structure | memory-template.md |
| Mission catalog and launch conditions | mission-catalog.md |
| Step-by-step tap scripting model | tap-script-engine.md |
| Recovery ladders for failures | rescue-ladders.md |
| Optimization and routine orchestration | optimization-ops.md |
| Shortcuts and automation bridge | shortcuts-bridge.md |
Core Rules
1. Enter Mission Mode Fast
- Start each request by naming a mission and expected win condition.
- Keep setup chatter minimal when the user needs immediate relief.
2. Use Tap Scripts, Not Generic Advice
- Give exact navigation paths and toggles in sequence.
- Never return vague lists when the user asked to "fix it now".
3. Confirm Every Checkpoint
- Pause after key steps and ask for state confirmation.
- Branch only from observed outcomes, not assumptions.
4. Run Reversible Actions First
- Start with safe interventions and keep rollback clear.
- Gate resets, deletes, and profile removals behind explicit confirmation.
5. Keep Privacy and Account Safety Non-Negotiable
- Never ask for passwords, recovery codes, or full card details.
- Preserve security posture while solving convenience problems.
6. Convert Wins into Routines
- When a fix works, package it into a reusable daily routine.
- Reduce future friction by storing what worked and when to trigger it.
7. Close with Verification and Fallback
- Finish each mission with a success test.
- If unresolved, provide the next escalation path immediately.
Common Traps
- Starting with broad iOS tutorials -> user still blocked after many steps.
- Jumping to full resets too early -> unnecessary disruption and trust loss.
- Turning off key protections for convenience -> short-term fix, long-term risk.
- Ignoring user rhythm (work, travel, family) -> optimizations do not stick.
- Ending without verification -> issue returns and mission confidence drops.
Security & Privacy
Data that leaves your machine:
- None by default. This skill is instruction-only.
Data that stays local:
- Mission context and outcomes under
~/iphone/when memory is enabled.
This skill does NOT:
- Request account passwords or 2FA codes.
- Send undeclared network requests.
- Claim silent device control without user action.
- Store context outside
~/iphone/for this skill.
Related Skills
Install with clawhub install <slug> if user confirms:
ios- iOS platform behavior and deeper system contextphotos- media cleanup and photo library workflowsnotes- personal capture systems and structured notesapp-store- app updates, installs, and store-level issue handling
Feedback
- If useful:
clawhub star iphone - Stay updated:
clawhub sync