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Charging Cable Retirement Tags

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install charging-cable-retirement-tags
Description
Create printable cable wrap tags, test-status stickers, keep-or-retire cards, drawer section signs, and a cable drawer reset checklist for unknown or questio...
README (SKILL.md)

Charging Cable Retirement Tags

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a user has a drawer full of unknown, slow, frayed, duplicate, device-specific, or questionable charging cables and needs visible tags to decide what to keep, test, label, relocate, or discard safely.

The deliverable is a printable cable drawer kit: cable wrap tags, test-status stickers, keep-or-retire cards, device match labels, drawer section signs, and a 30-minute reset checklist.

This skill organizes and labels cables only. It does not diagnose electrical faults, repair cables, recommend charger wattage, verify device compatibility, or provide battery safety advice.

Safety Boundary

Do not tell the user to use visibly damaged, frayed, melted, sparking, exposed-wire, overheating, or unreliable cables. Tell the user to remove visibly damaged cables from use and follow manufacturer guidance and local disposal or recycling rules.

Do not provide electrical repair instructions, charger wattage recommendations, battery advice, compatibility guarantees, product safety certification claims, or device troubleshooting beyond labeling and sorting. Do not ask for credentials, device passcodes, serial numbers, or private account data.

Use neutral visible labels such as "works," "slow," "data only," "charge only," "intermittent," "unknown," "duplicate," "daily," "travel," "backup," "specialty," "test later," and "recycle or dispose."

Use This Skill When

Use this skill when the user wants to:

  • Sort a cable drawer by device, room, owner, speed, travel use, backup use, or cable length.
  • Mark cables that work, are slow, are data only, charge only, intermittent, unknown, duplicate, or ready to retire.
  • Create cable wrap tags with device match, room home, last tested date, and travel or home status.
  • Separate damaged or questionable cords from everyday cables.
  • Build a visible reset routine for untangling and labeling cables.

Do not use this skill for electrical repair, charger selection, device compatibility verification, product safety assessment, battery troubleshooting, or e-waste legal advice.

Best Inputs

Ask for non-sensitive details:

  • Cable types, such as USB-C, Lightning, micro-USB, laptop chargers, camera cables, watch chargers, game controllers, hubs, or mystery cords.
  • Sorting preference, such as device, room, speed, travel use, backup use, length, owner, or cable type.
  • Visible condition categories, such as okay, frayed, bent, exposed wire, sticky, missing adapter, or unknown.
  • Where the drawer sections will live, such as daily, travel, backup, specialty, test later, recycle, or dispose.
  • Preferred tag size, color grouping, or printable format.

Avoid asking for serial numbers, passcodes, account data, private device contents, or warranty account details.

Workflow

  1. Inventory cable types and visible condition without diagnosing electrical faults.
  2. Choose the sorting rule: device, room, speed, travel use, backup use, length, owner, or type.
  3. Create cable wrap tags for device match, room home, owner, cable length, last tested date, and travel or home status.
  4. Generate test-status stickers for works, slow, data only, charge only, intermittent, unknown, duplicate, and retire.
  5. Build keep-or-retire cards that separate visibly damaged, unsupported, duplicate, specialty, and unknown cables.
  6. Add drawer section signs for daily, travel, backup, specialty, test later, and recycle or dispose.
  7. Add a safety note to remove visibly damaged cords from use and follow manufacturer and local disposal guidance.
  8. Provide a 30-minute cable drawer reset checklist for untangling, matching, labeling, bundling, and removing damaged cords from active use.

Output Format

Return the result in this order:

  1. Scope Note

    • Cable labeling and drawer organization only
    • No electrical diagnosis, repair, wattage recommendation, compatibility guarantee, or battery advice
    • Remove visibly damaged cords from use and follow manufacturer and local disposal guidance
  2. Cable Inventory

    • Cable type
    • Known device or mystery status
    • Visible condition
    • Current location
    • Proposed lane
  3. Cable Wrap Tags

    • Device match
    • Room home
    • Owner or role
    • Cable length
    • Last tested date
    • Travel or home status
  4. Test-Status Stickers

    • Works
    • Slow
    • Data only
    • Charge only
    • Intermittent
    • Unknown
    • Duplicate
    • Retire
  5. Keep-or-Retire Cards

    • Keep daily
    • Keep backup
    • Keep specialty
    • Test later
    • Duplicate review
    • Remove from use
    • Recycle or dispose guidance reminder
  6. Drawer Section Signs

    • Daily
    • Travel
    • Backup
    • Specialty
    • Test later
    • Recycle or dispose
  7. 30-Minute Cable Drawer Reset

    • Empty the drawer
    • Remove visibly damaged cords from active use
    • Group by cable type
    • Match obvious devices
    • Tag unknowns for testing later
    • Bundle and label keepers
    • Return only labeled cables to active sections

Style Guidelines

  • Keep tags short enough to wrap around a cable or attach to a bag.
  • Use plain status words that a household or office can understand quickly.
  • Keep questionable cables out of the daily lane.
  • Do not imply a cable is electrically safe because it has a label.
  • Keep recycle or dispose wording general and point back to local rules.

Quality Bar

A strong result lets the user reduce a tangled cable drawer into visible keep, test, backup, specialty, and retire lanes. It should make damaged and uncertain cords harder to keep using without offering electrical repair, compatibility, wattage, or battery advice.

Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe to use for making printable cable organization labels. Do not rely on it for electrical safety decisions; follow the skill’s own boundary to remove visibly damaged cords from use and follow manufacturer or local disposal guidance. If the platform asks for payment, crypto, credential, or network permissions, review carefully because the provided artifacts do not show any need for them.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: charging-cable-retirement-tags Version: 1.0.0 The skill is a prompt-only guide for organizing physical charging cables and contains no executable code, network requirements, or credential requests. It includes explicit safety boundaries in SKILL.md and skill.json that prohibit the agent from asking for sensitive data (passcodes, serial numbers) or providing dangerous electrical repair advice.
Capability Tags
cryptocan-make-purchases
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose and deliverables are coherent: printable cable wrap tags, stickers, cards, signs, and a reset checklist for cable organization.
Instruction Scope
The instructions are bounded to labeling and sorting, and they explicitly avoid electrical diagnosis, repair advice, charger wattage recommendations, compatibility guarantees, credentials, passcodes, and private account data.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec, no executable code, no required binaries, no required environment variables, and no package or automation hooks.
Credentials
The artifacts declare prompt-only/no-execution/no-network/no-credentials behavior, which is proportionate for generating printable organization materials. The provided capability signals for crypto and purchases are not corroborated by the actual file contents.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background activity, credential use, account access, local indexing, or privileged system behavior is present in the reviewed artifacts.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install charging-cable-retirement-tags
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /charging-cable-retirement-tags
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
- Initial release of the skill, "Charging Cable Retirement Tags" - Generates printable cable wrap tags, status stickers, keep-or-retire cards, drawer section signs, and a 30-minute reset checklist for organizing questionable or unknown charging cables - Focuses strictly on physical labeling and sorting, without diagnosing, repairing, or giving compatibility or electrical safety advice - Includes built-in safety guidance to remove visibly damaged cables and follow local disposal rules - Allows customization by cable type, use-case, owner, and drawer section for easy organization
Metadata
Slug charging-cable-retirement-tags
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Charging Cable Retirement Tags?

Create printable cable wrap tags, test-status stickers, keep-or-retire cards, drawer section signs, and a cable drawer reset checklist for unknown or questio... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 25 downloads so far.

How do I install Charging Cable Retirement Tags?

Run "/install charging-cable-retirement-tags" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Charging Cable Retirement Tags free?

Yes, Charging Cable Retirement Tags is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Charging Cable Retirement Tags support?

Charging Cable Retirement Tags is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Charging Cable Retirement Tags?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.0.

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