A confirmation email landed in my inbox this week. VIC N Drive Meet. A curated backroads blast with a bunch of fellow Nthusiasts, organised by Hyundai N Australia.
I’m a lifelong revhead. The smell of a good back road on a cool morning, a car that actually wants to be driven hard, and people who feel the same way about it - that’s a perfect Saturday. The i30 N is the best bang-for-buck hot hatch on the market, and I’ll die on that hill.
I’m registered, I’m keen, and I already had the booking email and a calendar entry sorted.
Then I asked Claude Cowork a simple question: “I have these details in my calendar and Gmail - should I capture this information elsewhere? Why? How?"
That question kicked off something I didn’t expect to be writing about.
What calendar can’t do
Calendar tells you when. Gmail tells you what. Neither of them is where you think. Neither of them is the layer where you process information, build a checklist, jot a note about fuelling up the night before or downloading offline maps for roads that might not have coverage.
That layer, for me, is Obsidian. My vault - called Infinite Looping - is where plans get structured, checklists get built and context gets captured. Calendar is the trigger. Obsidian is the brain.
The problem is they’ve always been two separate silos. You’d have the event in one place and the thinking in another and nothing connecting them.
What Cowork did
I gave Claude Cowork the booking email and asked whether I should capture it. Within a single session it did three things.
It reasoned through why the note was worth creating - not just “yes, make a note” but a clear argument about what calendar and Gmail can’t do for you on the day.
It created the Obsidian note in the right place. My vault runs on a PARA structure and the N Drive event belongs under Wellbeing & Spirit - it gets me away from the desk and behind the wheel, which is exactly the kind of thing that area is there for. The note has a route table, a schedule, a pre-departure checklist and a note about the return leg from Warragul. Useful stuff.
Then it added the Obsidian deep link to the calendar event itself. One tap from my phone on the morning of the 23rd and I’m straight into the note - checklist, route details and all. No hunting, no context switching.
The pattern is the point
After we’d done it, I said: “This is a very good pattern. We should remember to do this in future.”
And it did. It wrote the pattern to memory - construct the Obsidian deep link, find the calendar event, append the link to the description with no update notification so attendees don’t get pinged. It’ll do this automatically from now on without me having to ask.
That’s the thing about Cowork that keeps surprising me. It’s not just an assistant that does tasks. It’s a layer that can wire your tools together - provided you give it the right instructions and enough context about how you work.
I have a reasonably complex personal system. PARA structure in Obsidian, Google Calendar, Gmail, Asana, Todoist. These tools don’t talk to each other natively in any meaningful way. Cowork sits in the middle and, with the right setup, makes the connections that the tools themselves can’t be bothered making.
The N Drive note took a few minutes. The pattern it established will save me from thinking about it for every event from here on.
Can you tell I’m a fan?
I’ve been using Cowork seriously for a few weeks now and I keep finding these moments where something clicks into place that I didn’t know was loose.
The calendar-to-Obsidian link is a small thing. But small things done consistently are how a system actually works. And a system that wires itself together when you’re not paying attention is a system you can trust.
I’ll report back after the drive. Warragul, here we come.
The i30 N at the Nurburgring - where Hyundai proved the thing could absolutely carve corners: youtube.com
PARA - Tiago Forte’s four-category system for organising all digital information by actionability: Projects, Areas, Resources and Archive. The cleanest framework I’ve found for keeping a second brain from becoming a rubbish bin.
Obsidian - A local-first, markdown-based note-taking app that stores everything as plain text files on your own machine. No subscription, no cloud lock-in, no company going under and taking your notes with it. It’s where serious personal knowledge management happens.