/install apple-reminders-remindctl
Apple Reminders (remindctl)
Use this skill when Luis wants to track, capture, or check on time-anchored or place-anchored items that don't warrant a calendar event.
When to use this vs other stores
- Reminders — actions tied to a time, place, or recurrence. "Remind me to..."
- Google Calendar — events with a fixed time block and duration. "Schedule..."
- Open Brain — durable facts, context, decisions, patterns. "Remember that..."
If an item belongs in two stores (e.g. "remind me to take Mounjaro every Wednesday" is both a recurring reminder AND a protocol fact worth knowing), create the reminder first, then capture a thought in Open Brain referencing the reminder by its ID prefix in the format reminder:4A83.
Most reminders are ephemeral ("grab milk") and do NOT belong in Open Brain. Only mirror when the item is durable context Luis will want to reason about later.
Hard rules
- Default write target is the
Kaidanlist. Never write to other lists unless Luis explicitly names one ("add this to Shopping"). - Never use
delete. Usecompleteinstead — it's reversible via--incomplete. Completed reminders auto-purge per Reminders' own settings. - Never use list-level mutations — no
list --rename, nolist --delete, nolist --createwithout Luis explicitly asking. - Always pass
--jsonon read commands (show,list). Parse the output, present a human summary back. - Always pass
--no-inputto ensure non-interactive execution. - Use ID prefixes (e.g.
4A83), not indexes (1,2), for any operation that spans more than one command. Indexes shift betweenshowruns; ID prefixes are stable.
Priority mapping
Use Luis's A/B/C mode framework when setting --priority:
high— A-mode floor (protocol, non-negotiable)medium— B-mode (important, can flex)lowornone— C-mode (nice-to-have)
If priority isn't obvious from context, ask or default to none.
Common patterns
Check today's reminders:
remindctl show today --json --no-input
Check Luis's Kaidan list:
remindctl list Kaidan --json --no-input
Check all lists at once:
remindctl list --json --no-input
Add to default Kaidan list:
remindctl add "Title here" --list Kaidan --no-input --json
Add with due date:
remindctl add "Take Mounjaro" --list Kaidan --due "2026-05-13 09:00" --no-input --json
Add recurring:
remindctl add "Water garden" --list Kaidan --due tomorrow --repeat "every 3 days" --no-input --json
Add location-based (geofence):
remindctl add "Grab the mail" --list Kaidan --location "\x3Caddress>" --radius 100 --no-input --json
Complete by ID prefix:
remindctl complete 4A83 --json --no-input
Edit (change title, move list, set due, etc.):
remindctl edit 4A83 --due "2026-05-14 18:00" --json --no-input
Clear a due date or recurrence:
remindctl edit 4A83 --clear-due --no-repeat --json --no-input
Filters available on show
today | tomorrow | week | overdue | upcoming | open | completed | all | \x3CYYYY-MM-DD>
Default to today for "what do I have today" questions. Use overdue proactively when Luis hasn't checked in a while.
Failure modes
- Authorization revoked:
remindctl statusreturns not-authorized. Tell Luis to runremindctl authorizefrom a terminal at the Mac Mini. - List not found: Reminders requires the list to exist. Don't auto-create — ask Luis whether he wants the
Kaidanlist created or whether he meant a different list. - Ambiguous ID prefix: If
edit/completereturns an ambiguity error, runshow --jsonand use a longer prefix or the full ID. - Quiet output is misleading: Always parse
--jsonoutput to confirm success rather than assuming silence means success.
Notes on scope
remindctlis installed via Homebrew:brew install steipete/tap/remindctl- Requires macOS Reminders Automation permission (granted)
- All operations target the user's iCloud Reminders, so changes are visible on iPhone, Watch, and other Apple devices within seconds
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install apple-reminders-remindctl - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/apple-reminders-remindctl - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Apple Reminders (remindctl)?
Manage Apple Reminders via the remindctl CLI. Use for time-anchored or place-anchored tracking that doesn't belong on the calendar. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 56 downloads so far.
How do I install Apple Reminders (remindctl)?
Run "/install apple-reminders-remindctl" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Apple Reminders (remindctl) free?
Yes, Apple Reminders (remindctl) is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Apple Reminders (remindctl) support?
Apple Reminders (remindctl) is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Apple Reminders (remindctl)?
It is built and maintained by LuisBueno (@luisbueno); the current version is v1.0.0.