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Phone Charger Stash Map

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install phone-charger-stash-map
Description
Create a room-by-room household phone charger stash map with cable type, outlet location, return spot, travel backup, and reset routine without device passwo...
README (SKILL.md)

Phone Charger Stash Map

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a user wants a simple household map of where phone chargers, wall adapters, cables, power banks, and travel chargers live. The deliverable is a room-by-room stash map with cable type, assigned return spot, backup location, and a short reset routine.

This skill is for physical charger organization only. It does not request or record device passwords, account information, serial numbers, tracking settings, monitoring setup, device location sharing, or instructions to watch another person's device use.

Safety Boundary

Do not ask for or include passcodes, device passwords, Apple ID, Google account details, phone numbers, private device identifiers, tracking permissions, location-sharing setup, monitoring apps, parental surveillance settings, or account recovery data.

Keep the output about physical charger inventory, labeling, room placement, cable compatibility, safe visibility, and return routines. For damaged chargers, keep advice basic and conservative: stop using visibly damaged, frayed, hot, sparking, or unreliable items and replace them with appropriate certified accessories.

Core Principles

  • Make chargers findable before leaving the house.
  • Assign each cable a clear home base.
  • Label by connector type, not by private device owner data.
  • Keep travel and emergency backups separate from daily-use chargers.
  • Reduce cable drift with a light weekly reset.
  • Avoid tracking, monitoring, or account details entirely.

Required Inputs

Ask only for organization details:

  • Rooms or zones to include: kitchen, bedroom, entryway, office, car, backpack, guest room, living room, travel bag, or school bag.
  • Connector types: USB-C, Lightning, Micro-USB, USB-A, MagSafe, wireless pad, power bank cable, or mixed.
  • Charger types: wall plug, cable only, wireless pad, power bank, car charger, multi-port adapter, or travel cube.
  • Current pain point: missing cables, wrong connector, slow charger, tangled drawer, no charger by the door, or travel charger disappearing.
  • Number of daily-use charging spots desired.
  • Backup spots needed: car, bag, desk, guest area, or emergency drawer.
  • Labeling supplies available: tape, marker, cable tags, zip ties, drawer dividers, pouches, bins, or clips.
  • Reset frequency: daily, weekly, after trips, before school week, or before work week.

If the user does not know connector names, describe them in plain language and leave a column for connector type to confirm.

Workflow

  1. Inventory chargers. Count wall plugs, cables, wireless pads, power banks, car chargers, and travel chargers.
  2. Identify cable types. Label by connector type and charging role, not by private account or password information.
  3. Choose daily-use stations. Assign chargers to practical spots such as bed, desk, kitchen counter, entry table, or sofa side table.
  4. Choose backup spots. Set aside chargers for car, travel bag, backpack, office drawer, guest spot, or emergency drawer.
  5. Create return spots. Give every charger a home base, pouch, clip, bin, drawer section, or hook.
  6. Flag damaged items. Mark visibly damaged, frayed, overheating, sparking, or unreliable chargers as do-not-use and replace.
  7. Make the visible map. Build a room-by-room list that can be posted near the entryway, drawer, or family command center.
  8. Add a reset routine. Create a quick sweep for returning cables, checking travel backups, and replacing missing labels.
  9. Add a leaving-home check. Include a short check for phone, charger, cable, and power bank if needed.

Output Format

Return a phone charger stash map with these sections:

  1. Household Charging Goal
    • Main annoyance to solve
    • Daily charging spots needed
    • Backup spots needed
    • Privacy note: no passwords, accounts, tracking, or monitoring
  2. Room-by-Room Charger Map
    • Room or zone
    • Charger type
    • Connector type
    • Outlet or drawer location
    • Assigned return spot
    • Notes
  3. Daily-Use Stations
    • Bedside
    • Desk
    • Kitchen or entry
    • Living room
    • Other user-provided zones
  4. Backup and Travel Stash
    • Car charger
    • Travel pouch
    • Backpack or work bag
    • Guest charger
    • Emergency power bank
  5. Cable Type Key
    • USB-C
    • Lightning
    • Micro-USB
    • Wireless pad
    • Other connector types provided by the user
  6. Label Plan
    • Label wording
    • Tag or tape location
    • Color or symbol if useful
    • Return spot label
  7. Do-Not-Use Check
    • Frayed cable
    • Bent connector
    • Hot or sparking plug
    • Unreliable charger
    • Replacement note
  8. Weekly Reset Routine
    • Return chargers to home spots
    • Refill travel pouch
    • Untangle drawer
    • Check power bank charge
    • Replace missing labels
  9. Leaving-Home Mini Check
    • Phone
    • Cable
    • Wall plug
    • Power bank if needed
    • Travel pouch returned after use

Example Prompts

Copy any prompt below and paste it to your AI agent. Fill in your household details.

Family charger map:

Our family of four is always hunting for phone chargers. We have USB-C and Lightning cables all over the house. Can you help me make a room-by-room charger stash map? I want to assign each cable a home spot: bedside, kitchen counter, living room, and entryway. Also need backup chargers for the car and travel bags.

Declutter and reset:

Our charging drawer is a tangled mess of old cables. I want to inventory what we actually use, label each charger by connector type and return spot, and set up a simple weekly reset routine. I don't want any tracking, monitoring, or account stuff—just physical charger organization.

Travel and backup plan:

I keep losing my travel charger between trips. Help me make a charger map that includes: daily charging stations at home, a dedicated travel pouch checklist, a car charger spot, and a leaving-home check so I don't forget my cable and power bank before work trips.

Quality Bar

A strong result feels like a practical household map that ends charger hunting without creating surveillance, account, or password records. It should be easy to print, tape inside a cabinet, or place near the door, and it should make cable return habits visible.

Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe for organizing physical chargers. As with any household planning prompt, avoid adding unnecessary private details such as names tied to bedrooms, phone numbers, account details, passwords, device identifiers, or tracking information.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: phone-charger-stash-map Version: 1.0.1 The skill is a prompt-only organizational tool for mapping physical phone charger locations. It contains no executable code, requires no network access, and includes explicit safety boundaries in SKILL.md and skill.json that prohibit the agent from requesting sensitive information such as passwords, account details, or tracking data.
Capability Tags
cryptocan-make-purchases
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose is narrow and coherent: creating a room-by-room physical charger inventory and return routine.
Instruction Scope
The instructions explicitly limit the assistant to charger organization and tell it not to ask for passwords, account data, identifiers, tracking, or monitoring setup.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec, no executable code, no required binaries, no required environment variables, and no package or script execution.
Credentials
The requested user inputs are proportionate to the goal: rooms, charger types, connector types, return spots, labels, and reset frequency.
Persistence & Privilege
The artifacts show no persistence, background behavior, credential use, account access, file access, or privilege requirements.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install phone-charger-stash-map
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /phone-charger-stash-map
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
- Added new example prompts to SKILL.md for easier user onboarding. - Expanded SKILL.md output format section for clarity, including more detailed sub-sections. - No code or logic changes; documentation enhancements only. - No changes to requirements, privacy, or core functionality.
v1.0.0
Initial release of Phone Charger Stash Map: - Provides a household phone charger organization map, room-by-room, without passwords, accounts, or tracking. - Details cable types, outlet locations, assigned return spots, backup and travel charging stations, and reset routines. - Focuses on physical charger inventory and safe usage, with clear labeling and a weekly organization checklist. - Ensures privacy by avoiding any device monitoring or personal account data. - Output is a practical, printable stash map for easy charger management and visibility.
Metadata
Slug phone-charger-stash-map
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Phone Charger Stash Map?

Create a room-by-room household phone charger stash map with cable type, outlet location, return spot, travel backup, and reset routine without device passwo... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 104 downloads so far.

How do I install Phone Charger Stash Map?

Run "/install phone-charger-stash-map" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Phone Charger Stash Map free?

Yes, Phone Charger Stash Map is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Phone Charger Stash Map support?

Phone Charger Stash Map is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Phone Charger Stash Map?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.1.

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