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Day: February 25, 2026

  • Naval Ravikant 2026 Megasode: Every Lesson on Wealth, Happiness, Judgment & Truth (4-Hour Breakdown)

    TLDR

    Naval Ravikant sat down with Eric Jorgenson (author of The Almanack of Naval Ravikant) for a 4+ hour megasode on the Smart Friends podcast — his most comprehensive public conversation in years. Five years after the original Almanack, Naval updates and expands his thinking across five pillars: building wealth, building judgment, learning happiness, saving yourself, and philosophy. The biggest shifts? He now leans heavily on David Deutsch’s definition of wealth as “the set of physical transformations you can affect,” sees AI as the ultimate leverage tool (not a replacement for human judgment), and has moved past chasing happiness toward pursuing truth, love, and beauty. He’s working on a new stealth company, has met roughly a dozen people he considers genuinely enlightened, and believes the most important formula for life is: stay healthy, get wealthy, seek truth, give love, and create beauty.


    Key Takeaways

    On Wealth

    Deutsch’s definition is deeper than “assets that earn while you sleep.” Naval now defines wealth as the set of physical transformations you can affect — and the biggest driver of that capability is knowledge, not capital. If you removed Elon Musk from SpaceX, the wealth doesn’t just transfer. It disappears. The value is in the knowledge, not in the factory.

    Knowledge is the real multiplier. Ten modern humans can change more than ten paleolithic humans — not because of capital, but because of accumulated knowledge. As a society gains knowledge, it becomes wealthier. As an individual gains knowledge, they become wealthier. This is why Marx was fundamentally wrong: value is not in the capital. It’s in the people doing things.

    Ethical wealth creation is not only possible — it’s the norm in free markets. The common critiques of capitalism target cronyism, money printing, and government favoritism. None of that is free market capitalism. Real capitalism is a minimum structured set of rules that channels competitive energy into creating property instead of fighting over it.

    This is the greatest period for wealth creation in human history. More knowledge, more capital, more leverage than ever before. If you’re moderately intelligent, not afraid of hard work, and flexible, you can do extremely well. But it takes 10 to 30 years. There are no get-rich-quick schemes.

    AI is the ultimate leverage tool, not a replacement. Software engineers aren’t being replaced by AI — AI is letting software engineers replace everybody else. The people saying “programming is dead” are completely wrong. The most leveraged engineers are the ones building AI systems, then the ones using them. AI is great when wrong answers are okay. For anything requiring creativity or judgment at the edge, you still need humans.

    Good products are hard to vary. Drawing from David Deutsch’s epistemology, Naval argues that the best products — like the iPhone — are like good scientific explanations: you can’t change the details without breaking them. They encapsulate deep knowledge, have surprising reach into applications the creators never imagined, and exhibit winner-take-all network effects.

    On Judgment

    Judgment is the most valuable thing in the age of infinite leverage. The difference between a CEO who’s right 80% of the time and one who’s right 85% of the time is worth billions of dollars when you’re steering a multi-trillion dollar ship. Direction matters more than any other single thing.

    Judgment evolves into taste. First you reason through decisions logically. Then your subconscious enters into it (judgment). Then your whole body reacts to it (taste). The Rick Rubins and Steve Jobs of the world operate at the level of taste — they can’t fully explain why something is right, they just know. Naval says his investing is now “almost entirely taste.”

    It takes time to develop your gut, but once it’s developed, don’t listen to anything else. This applies to people, investments, products, and life decisions. Older people have very good judgment about other people because human interaction is the one area where everyone is constantly gaining experience.

    Learn from specific to general, not general to specific. This is Seneca’s insight: encounter reality, test it, learn from it, then generalize. Going the other way creates what Nassim Taleb calls “intellectual yet idiot” — someone overeducated and underpracticed. If you want to be a philosopher king, first be a king.

    Hard work is non-negotiable, but it shouldn’t feel like work. The most productive people work intensely on problems that fascinate them. The biggest breakthroughs come during deep immersion — 24-36 hour sessions where you can’t put the problem down. But if it feels like forced drudgery, you’ll lose to someone who finds it genuinely enjoyable.

    AI doesn’t have judgment. It has incredible information retrieval — the ability to cross-correlate all human knowledge and return the conventional correct answer. But for creative problems, novel situations, or anything requiring values and binding principles, AI falls short. It raises the tide for everyone, but there’s no “alpha” in the AI answer because everyone gets the same one.

    On Happiness

    Naval’s latest thinking: he’s not sure happiness exists. Happiness is a construct of the mind, a thought claiming to be a state. When the thought disappears, there’s no “you” there to be happy or unhappy. His focus has shifted from pursuing happiness to cultivating peace — being okay with things as they are, with few and consciously chosen desires.

    The three big ones are wealth, health, and happiness — pursued in that order, but their importance is reversed. Naturally happy people have the greatest gift and don’t need the others. Health matters more than wealth (a sick man only wants one thing). But most people will pursue them wealth-first simply because of energy, flexibility, and the practical reality of financial obligations when young.

    The more you think about yourself, the less happy you’ll be. Depressed people ruminate on themselves. Having motives larger than yourself — your mission, your children, your contribution — makes setbacks hurt less because they’re not personal. This is why Naval says: live for something larger than yourself, but only on your own terms.

    Chronic unhappiness is an ego trip. Acute unhappiness is real and useful — it’s a signal. But chronic unhappiness is wanting to feel more “you,” more separate, more important. Identity creates motivated reasoning. The thinner your identity, the more clearly you can see reality.

    The modern devil is cheap dopamine. Every deadly sin is a form of cheap dopamine. The direct pursuit of pleasure causes addiction and dopamine burnout. Virtues are the opposite — long-term individually beneficial behaviors that also create win-win outcomes for society. All virtues can be reinterpreted as long-term selfishness.

    Meditation isn’t about enlightenment — it’s about self-observation. When you’re more self-aware, you catch your mind doing things that aren’t in your long-term interest. You can reset, question whether a desire matters, and choose whether to reinterpret a situation or address the underlying problem.

    You don’t store memories — you store interpretations of memories. Changing those interpretations is what forgiveness actually is. Psychedelics, meditation, and honest introspection all work partly because they allow you to reprocess and reframe past experiences.

    On Saving Yourself

    Nobody is coming to save you. An ideal life is designed, not inherited. Naval claims his life is “really good” — at any given time he’s doing what he wants, nothing is obligatory, and if something stops being enjoyable, he changes it very quickly. This requires ruthless honesty about relationships, obligations, and what you actually want.

    Every relationship is transactional — and that’s okay. Naval draws a hard line against false obligations. He doesn’t attend obligatory events, weddings, or ritualistic celebrations. The result: he’s left with people who are similarly free, low-ego, and voluntarily present. Nobody takes each other for granted.

    The secret to a happy relationship is two happy people. You can’t be happy with your spouse if you’re not happy alone. Happiness is personal and must be tackled individually. Putting relationships ahead of your own inner work gets you neither.

    God, kids, or mission — find at least one. Naval has all three. His “God” is personal and unarticulated. Family is irreplaceable (expand your definition as you age). And mission means actively building — right now that’s a stealth company and this kind of conversation.

    Explore widely, then invest deeply. Modern society has made exploration easy, but all the benefits come from compound interest. You don’t learn through 10,000 hours — you learn through 10,000 honest iterations. Do, reflect, change, try again. Once your judgment tells you what fits, stop exploring and start compounding.

    The only true test of intelligence is whether you get what you want out of life. This is a two-part test: choosing what to want (the harder part) and then getting it. If you pass that test, there’s nothing to be envious of. Choose inspiration over envy — find the part of someone else’s success that resonates with something inside you.

    On Philosophy

    Naval’s philosophical foundation: evolution + Buddhism + Deutsch. Evolution explains humans. Buddhism is the most time-tested internal philosophy. David Deutsch’s epistemology — good explanations that are hard to vary, conjecture and criticism — provides the best framework for understanding progress in science, business, and society.

    Truth is a crystal in the multiverse. In the many-worlds interpretation, true knowledge replicates across more universes because it works. False knowledge is infinitely variable but gets eliminated. The “Rickiest of the Ricks” (from Rick and Morty) is the most truth-oriented version — lowest ego, least motivated reasoning, operating from the most universal principles.

    Enlightenment is binary, not a path. Naval has met about a dozen people he considers genuinely enlightened. They share one trait: persistent experience of “no self.” Nothing bothers them — not cancer diagnoses, not personal failures. It’s not that they lack desire or capability. They’re often more effective, not less. But they don’t take anything personally.

    The self is just a thought. When you look for the self — really look — you can never pin it down. It’s like a burning stick whirled in a circle that appears to be a flaming wheel. Just thoughts convincing you there’s someone there. Enlightened people have seen through this and their default state is pure awareness.

    The real truths are heresies. There’s a 2×2 matrix of truth vs. spreadability: conventional wisdom (true and spreads), fake news (false and spreads), nonsense (false and doesn’t spread), and heresies (true but don’t spread). Heresies don’t spread because any truth that lowers group cohesion gets suppressed. This is why the greatest philosophers are read long after their deaths — they told harsh truths while alive that society wasn’t ready to hear.

    Read the best 100 books over and over. Naval reads authors, not books. He reads philosophers, not authors. He’ll consume everything by Schopenhauer, Deutsch, Osho, Taleb, Krishnamurti — and until he’s finished everything by one thinker, he won’t move to the next. He judges philosophers by the outcomes they achieved in their own lives. A philosophy that led its creator to misery is suspect.

    Simulation theory is just modern religion. Every era maps its dominant technology onto religion — the sun god, the god-king, the mechanical universe, and now the computational universe. Naval finds understanding relativity, quantum physics, and cosmology more satisfying than saying “the universe is a computer.” He maps Buddhism onto simulation theory (the white room in the Matrix = pure consciousness = enlightenment) but considers sim theory unfalsifiable and reductive.


    Detailed Summary

    Part 1: Building Wealth (0:00 – 37:49)

    The conversation opens with Naval updating his definition of wealth through David Deutsch’s lens. Where he originally defined wealth as “assets that earn while you sleep” — a practical definition aimed at escaping the 9-to-5 trap — he now sees wealth more expansively as the set of physical transformations you can affect. This reframes wealth from a passive accumulation game to an active capability powered primarily by knowledge.

    Naval makes a forceful case that knowledge, not capital, is the real wealth multiplier. He uses SpaceX as his central example: remove Elon Musk and the wealth doesn’t just redistribute — it evaporates, because the knowledge that makes SpaceX valuable disappears with the people who hold it. This is why Marxism fundamentally fails. The value isn’t in the factories. You can’t slice it up and redistribute it like gold.

    He addresses the ethics of capitalism head-on, acknowledging that the majority of economic activity involves people fighting over existing wealth rather than creating new wealth (he draws an analogy to nature, where parasitic species outnumber standalone ones six to one). But he argues that free market capitalism, at its core, is the system that channels competitive energy into creation rather than destruction. The critiques of capitalism — bank bailouts, cronyism, government favoritism — target corruption of the system, not the system itself.

    On AI and leverage, Naval makes what may be his most quotable claim: “AI is not going to replace software engineers — AI is going to let software engineers replace everybody else.” He sees AI as an incredible information retrieval and calculation tool that raises the floor for everyone, but provides no lasting competitive edge because everyone has access to the same answers. The real edge comes from judgment, creativity, and taste — the things AI cannot provide.

    He connects Deutsch’s concept of “good explanations” to product building. Good products, like good scientific theories, are hard to vary — you can’t change the details without breaking them. The iPhone’s original form factor is still essentially unchanged because they nailed it. He notes that all technology has winner-take-all dynamics, and the best products amortize their development costs over the largest user base, making it impossible for any amount of money to buy a better alternative.

    Part 2: Building Judgment (37:49 – 1:12:30)

    Naval describes judgment as the single most important capability in an age of infinite leverage. He traces its development from conscious logical reasoning through subconscious intuition to full-body taste — the stage where you simply know what’s right without being able to articulate why.

    He quotes John Cleese on creative problem-solving: “You simply have to let your mind rest against the problem in a friendly, persistent way.” This captures Naval’s view that breakthroughs require both intense focus and a relaxed, non-forcing attitude. He shares his own experience writing a compiler in college, where his most productive sessions were 24-36 hour marathons because it took hours just to reload the problem into his head after time away.

    The section includes an important distinction between AI’s capabilities and human judgment. AI can cross-correlate all human knowledge and deliver the conventional correct answer for solved problems. But it lacks values, binding principles, and the ability to handle novel situations with idiosyncratic context. Naval sees AI as “magic” that looks like intelligence because of its staggering information retrieval, but it operates as a one-size-fits-all system trained on textbooks and data labelers’ opinions.

    He emphasizes learning from specific to general (Seneca’s principle), warns against academic over-education without practice (Taleb’s “intellectual yet idiot”), and shares how he now reads less but more deliberately — using reading to spark his own thinking rather than absorbing others’ ideas for regurgitation. He singles out Schopenhauer as a writer where every sentence is crafted and you get something different from the same essay on every re-read.

    Part 3: Learning Happiness (1:12:30 – 2:15:17)

    This is the most philosophical section, where Naval significantly updates his earlier thinking. He admits he’s “not sure happiness exists” as a distinct state, framing it instead as a thought that claims to be a state. When the thought disappears, there’s no observer left to be happy or unhappy. This is deeply Buddhist — the no-self doctrine applied to emotional states.

    His practical advice centers on cultivating peace rather than chasing happiness. He wants few, consciously chosen desires. He wants to act for reasons larger than himself (which paradoxically makes failure hurt less). And he wants to create space for authentic joy rather than ritualistic obligation.

    Naval introduces his framework of “truth, love, and beauty” as what remains after health and wealth are handled. Truth is pursued because even uncomfortable truths make life better (he uses The Matrix’s Neo vs. Cipher as his central illustration). Love is best experienced as giving rather than receiving — falling in love with someone or something is the high, not being loved. Beauty is creation — the highest human art form and what separates his view from pure Buddhist quietism.

    He discusses William Glasser’s choice theory at length, presenting the controversial view that depression often originates as a series of childhood behavioral choices that became unconscious habits. While acknowledging chemical components, he argues the explanation must be offered at the same level as the question — and that changing your brain through honest self-examination is more sustainable than long-term pharmaceutical intervention.

    The section on meditation is refreshingly honest: the first 20 minutes your mind goes berserk, then it calms, and most of the benefit comes from simply acknowledging emotions rather than solving them. He describes a personal experience of extreme unhappiness where a part of him was simultaneously watching and recognizing “there’s nothing actually here — you’re creating a drama to feel important.”

    Part 4: Saving Yourself (2:15:17 – 2:50:17)

    Naval gets deeply personal about how he’s designed his life. He claims to have “an amazing life” where at any given time he’s doing exactly what he wants. Nothing is obligatory. Every relationship is voluntary. He maintains zero estranged family members while refusing to attend weddings, obligatory events, or ritualistic celebrations.

    His stance on relationships is uncompromising: every relationship is transactional (providing mutual value), and pretending otherwise creates false obligations that breed resentment. He refuses to train his children to say “thank you” on command — if they feel genuine gratitude, it will emerge naturally. He believes the only real relationships are peer relationships, even employer-employee ones.

    The exploration-vs-investment framework is one of the most actionable parts of the conversation. Modern society has made exploration easy (you can fly anywhere, enter any career, date infinitely), but all benefits come from compound interest — which requires commitment. The key transition is recognizing when to stop exploring and start investing. Naval argues that learning happens through honest iterations (do, reflect, change, repeat), not hours logged.

    He names his sources of meaning: a personal relationship with “whatever this is” (God, loosely), his children and family, and his current stealth company. He explicitly says he doesn’t feel qualified to write a book about enlightenment because he hasn’t fully explored it himself — and he’s partly just lazy.

    Part 5: Philosophy (2:50:17 – End)

    The final section weaves together Naval’s philosophical commitments: evolution, Buddhism, and David Deutsch’s epistemology. He frames truth as “a crystal in the multiverse” — in the many-worlds interpretation, truth replicates because it works, while falsehood is infinitely variable but gets eliminated through skin-in-the-game dynamics.

    His account of enlightened people is fascinating and specific. He’s met about a dozen, verified to his own satisfaction through sustained observation (watching them encounter genuinely bad events without perturbation). They include well-known names like Rupert Spira, Mooji, and Sadhguru, plus personal friends and lesser-known figures. The key trait: a persistent experience of no self. It’s binary — not a gradient. They’re often more capable, not less. More authentic desires, less mimetic behavior, less ego-driven.

    He maps Buddhism onto simulation theory in an extended riff: breaking out of the Matrix is the quest for enlightenment, the white room is pure consciousness, and the boredom of the white room explains why consciousness generates infinite forms (why God forgets himself and goes back into the game). But he ultimately considers simulation theory a “lousy theory” — unfalsifiable, reductive, and just the latest version of mapping our dominant technology onto religion.

    The conversation closes with Naval’s 2×2 matrix of truth and spreadability (conventional wisdom, fake news, heresies, nonsense) and the observation that the only things that make it through the information environment are fake news — because conventional wisdom doesn’t need spreading, heresies can’t spread, and nonsense goes nowhere. The real truths, the heresies, can only be discovered, whispered, and perhaps read.


    Thoughts

    Five years after The Almanack of Naval Ravikant, this megasode feels like Naval 3.0. The original Naval (pre-Almanack) was focused on practical wealth creation and startup wisdom. Almanack Naval synthesized that with Eastern philosophy and general life principles. This version integrates David Deutsch’s epistemology into everything — wealth becomes knowledge creation, good products become good explanations, and even enlightenment gets framed through the multiverse.

    What strikes me most is the honesty about contradictions. Naval simultaneously says he’s “not sure happiness exists” while describing his life as amazing. He advocates dropping all obligations while maintaining zero estranged family members. He promotes laziness while admitting he’s working harder than ever on his new company. These aren’t inconsistencies — they’re the natural texture of a philosophy that’s been lived rather than theorized.

    The AI section is worth paying attention to. In a world where every AI influencer is either panicking about job replacement or promising utopia, Naval’s take is refreshingly grounded: AI is leverage, like every technology before it. It raises the floor for everyone. It provides no lasting edge because everyone gets the same answer. The edge comes from judgment, taste, and creativity — which are developed through experience, not downloaded from a model.

    His list of “enlightened” people is going to generate the most discussion and controversy. Claiming to have personally verified a dozen enlightened beings is a bold statement from someone who also says he’s “not sure there’s such a thing as enlightenment.” But it’s consistent with his framework: enlightenment isn’t a special state. It’s the absence of a constructed self. It’s binary. And it doesn’t prevent you from running a company, dating, or living a fully functional life.

    The deepest insight might be the simplest: stay healthy, get wealthy, seek truth, give love, and create beauty. If you internalize nothing else from these four hours, that five-part formula is worth the price of admission — which, in keeping with Naval’s philosophy, is free.


    This article is a summary and analysis of Naval Ravikant’s 4-hour megasode on the Smart Friends podcast with Eric Jorgenson, released January 2026. The full episode is available for free on YouTube and all major podcast platforms.

  • Claude Code Remote Control: How to Code From Your Phone in 2026 (Complete Setup Guide)

    Claude Code Remote Control: How to Code From Your Phone in 2026 (Complete Setup Guide)

    TL;DR: Anthropic just launched Claude Code Remote Control, a feature that lets you control your local Claude Code terminal sessions from your phone, tablet, or any browser. Run claude remote-control in your terminal, scan a QR code, and you’ve got full control of your coding session from anywhere in your house — or anywhere with an internet connection. Your code stays local. Nothing moves to the cloud. Available now for Max subscribers ($100–$200/month) with Pro plan access ($20/month) rolling out soon.

    What Is Claude Code Remote Control?

    Claude Code Remote Control is a new feature from Anthropic that creates a secure bridge between your local Claude Code terminal session and any remote device. Think of it as a live window into your running coding session that you can access from your phone, a tablet, or another computer’s browser.

    The critical distinction here is that this is not cloud computing. When you use Remote Control, Claude continues running on your local machine. Your filesystem, your MCP servers, your tools, your environment variables, your project configuration — all of it stays exactly where it is. The remote device is simply a viewport and input mechanism for that local session.

    This matters because many developers have complex local setups with custom tooling, private repos, and Model Context Protocol (MCP) integrations that don’t exist in the cloud. Remote Control preserves all of that context while letting you walk away from your desk.

    Key Takeaways

    Instant setup with minimal friction. Run claude remote-control or type /rc inside an existing session. A session URL and QR code appear. Scan the code with your phone and you’re connected.

    Everything stays local. Your code, files, MCP servers, and project configuration never leave your machine. The remote device is just a control interface — Anthropic’s servers route messages between your devices over TLS, but your actual development environment stays put.

    Conversations sync across all devices. You can send messages from your terminal, then from your phone, then from a browser on a different computer. The session doesn’t care where the input comes from. Everything stays in sync.

    Auto-reconnect after interruptions. If your laptop goes to sleep or your network drops, the session automatically reconnects when your machine comes back online. You don’t lose your place.

    One remote session at a time. Each Claude Code session supports a single remote connection. Your terminal must stay open — if you close it or kill the Claude process, the session ends.

    Available for Max subscribers now. Remote Control requires a Pro or Max plan. API keys are not supported. Max users have access today, with Pro access rolling out soon. Team and Enterprise plans are not yet supported.

    Not the same as Claude Code on the web. Claude Code on the web runs on Anthropic’s cloud infrastructure and doesn’t need a local machine at all. Remote Control runs on your machine and gives you remote access to that local session. Different tools for different situations.

    How Claude Code Remote Control Works Under the Hood

    When you start a Remote Control session, your local machine initiates an outbound HTTPS connection to Anthropic’s API. No inbound ports are opened on your computer. Your machine registers with the API and polls for work. When you connect from a remote device — phone, tablet, browser — Anthropic’s server routes messages between the web/mobile client and your local session over a streaming connection.

    All traffic passes through Anthropic’s API over TLS using multiple short-lived credentials that are scoped to a single purpose and expire independently. Your files and MCP servers never leave your machine. Only chat messages and tool results flow through the encrypted bridge.

    This architecture means your session URL is effectively a credential. Anyone with that URL can interact with your local Claude Code session, including approving file changes. Treat it like a password.

    How to Set Up Claude Code Remote Control: Step by Step

    Prerequisites

    Before you start, make sure your environment meets these requirements:

    Subscription: You need a Pro or Max plan on claude.ai. API keys won’t work here.

    Authentication: Run claude in your terminal and use /login to sign in through claude.ai if you haven’t already.

    Workspace trust: Run claude in your project directory at least once and accept the workspace trust dialog.

    Claude Code version: Update to version 2.1.52 or later.

    Option 1: Start a New Remote Control Session

    Navigate to your project directory and run:

    claude remote-control

    The terminal displays a session URL and stays running, waiting for remote connections. Press spacebar to toggle a QR code display for quick phone access.

    This command supports several flags:

    --verbose shows detailed connection and session logs. --sandbox / --no-sandbox enables or disables filesystem and network isolation during the session. Sandboxing is off by default.

    Option 2: Go Remote From an Existing Session

    If you’re already deep in a Claude Code conversation and want to continue it from another device, type:

    /remote-control

    Or use the shorthand:

    /rc

    This carries over your entire conversation history — every message, file edit, and tool call — and generates the session URL and QR code. The --verbose, --sandbox, and --no-sandbox flags are not available with this in-session command.

    Connecting From Your Phone or Another Device

    You have three ways to connect:

    Scan the QR code. This is the fastest path. Point your phone camera at the code and it opens directly in the Claude app if you have it installed.

    Open the session URL. The URL is displayed in your terminal alongside the QR code. Copy it and open it in any browser.

    Find it in the session list. Open claude.ai/code or the Claude mobile app and look for your session by name. Remote Control sessions display a computer icon with a green status dot when they’re online.

    Pro tip: Use /rename to give your session a descriptive name before going remote. Something like “Auth refactor – Feb 2026” is much easier to find than the default “Remote Control session.”

    If you don’t have the Claude mobile app yet, type /mobile inside Claude Code to display a download QR code for iOS or Android.

    Enable Remote Control for All Sessions Automatically

    By default, Remote Control only activates when you explicitly run the command. To make every session remotely accessible automatically, run /config inside Claude Code and set “Enable Remote Control for all sessions” to true.

    Remote Control vs. Claude Code on the Web

    Both Remote Control and Claude Code on the web use the claude.ai/code interface, but they serve fundamentally different purposes.

    Remote Control executes on your machine. Your local MCP servers, tools, custom configurations, and entire filesystem remain available. Use this when you’re in the middle of local work and want to keep going from another device.

    Claude Code on the web executes on Anthropic-managed cloud infrastructure. Use this when you want to kick off a task without any local setup, work on a repo you don’t have cloned, or run multiple tasks in parallel.

    The choice is straightforward: if you have a complex local environment with MCP servers and custom tooling, use Remote Control. If you want zero-setup cloud execution, use Claude Code on the web.

    Real-World Use Cases for Remote Control

    Long-running refactors. Kick off a large refactoring task — say, migrating 40+ files from CSS modules to Tailwind. Instead of sitting there watching for 20 minutes, scan the QR code and monitor progress from your phone while you take a break.

    Build monitoring. Start a complex build that’s been failing intermittently. Claude investigates, reads logs, and tries fixes. You head to a meeting and check results from your phone during a quiet moment.

    Multi-session management. Run three separate Claude Code sessions — one fixing a production bug, one writing tests, one doing a dependency upgrade. Each gets its own Remote Control session. Switch between them on your phone like switching chat threads.

    End-of-day code review. You’ve been at your desk for hours and don’t want to stare at a monitor anymore, but you have generated code to review. Connect from your phone on the couch, scroll through file changes, and leave follow-up instructions.

    Limitations and Things to Watch Out For

    Your terminal must stay open. Remote Control runs as a local process. If you close the terminal or stop the Claude process, the session ends. Period.

    Your machine must be on and connected. If your home WiFi goes down, the session pauses. Claude isn’t doing work in the background while your machine is offline. It auto-reconnects when connectivity returns, but no work happens in the meantime.

    One remote connection per session. You can’t have multiple remote devices controlling the same session simultaneously in separate connections — though you can switch between devices since the conversation syncs.

    Mobile screen limitations. Reviewing diffs and detailed code on a phone screen has obvious constraints. Remote Control is great for monitoring, approvals, and simple instructions. Detailed code review is still better at your desk.

    Session URL security. Anyone with your session URL has full control. This includes the ability to approve file changes on your local machine. Don’t share it carelessly.

    Early bugs exist. As with any new feature, there are some edge cases. Some users have reported that remote sessions don’t always appear in the session list, making it hard to reconnect after navigating away from the app. Anthropic is actively working on fixes.

    The Bigger Picture: Why This Matters

    Remote Control might seem like a convenience feature, but it signals something important about where AI-assisted development is heading. Claude Code has hit a $2.5 billion annualized run rate as of February 2026 — more than doubling since the start of the year. It now powers an estimated 4% of all public GitHub commits worldwide and has reached 29 million daily installs in Visual Studio Code.

    The move to mobile access reflects a shift in how developers interact with AI coding agents. These aren’t autocomplete tools that need you staring at a screen. They’re autonomous agents that work through multi-file tasks over minutes or hours. The natural next step is letting developers supervise and direct that work from wherever they happen to be.

    Before Remote Control launched officially, developers were already hacking together mobile access using Tailscale for tunneling, Termius or Termux for mobile SSH, and tmux for session persistence. Some built custom WebSocket bridges. Anthropic essentially productized what power users were already doing — but with native integration, auto-reconnect, and proper security.

    Competitors are approaching this differently. GitHub Copilot’s coding agent can be assigned from GitHub Mobile, but it runs entirely in GitHub’s cloud via Actions. Cursor shipped a third-party iOS companion app in January 2026 that relays prompts to a Mac running the Cursor IDE. Claude Code’s differentiator is clear: local execution with the full environment preserved, accessible from any device.

    My Thoughts

    This feature solves a real problem that most Claude Code users have hit at least once: you’re mid-task, something interrupts you, and you either abandon context or chain yourself to your desk. Remote Control eliminates that tradeoff entirely.

    The fact that everything stays local is the right call architecturally. Developers with complex local setups — custom MCP servers, specific environment configurations, private tooling — would never trust a cloud handoff to preserve all of that context correctly. By keeping execution local and just proxying the interface, Anthropic avoids that trust problem entirely.

    The security model is sensible too. Outbound-only connections, TLS encryption, short-lived credentials — there’s nothing unusual here, and that’s the point. The session URL being the single credential to protect keeps the mental model simple.

    Where this gets really interesting is when combined with the auto-enable option. If every Claude Code session is automatically remotely accessible, developers can adopt a new workflow pattern: start tasks, walk away, check in periodically from wherever they are, and come back to completed work. That’s a meaningful change in how coding sessions are structured throughout a day.

    For solo developers and indie hackers juggling multiple projects, the ability to monitor and manage several concurrent Claude Code sessions from a phone is genuinely powerful. It turns dead time — waiting rooms, commutes, coffee breaks — into lightweight supervision time.

    The main concern is the early-stage bugs. Session reconnection issues and visibility in session lists need to be rock-solid for this to be a reliable part of anyone’s workflow. But those are solvable problems, and Anthropic’s pace of iteration on Claude Code has been consistently fast.

    Bottom line: if you’re a Claude Code user on a Max plan, there’s no reason not to try this today. It takes 30 seconds to set up and it fundamentally changes how you can structure your development sessions.