This post is sponsored by Drafts. Sponsorship doesn’t influence what I write. Here’s my take.
I’ve been a Drafts user since its release. It’s the first place text goes on every device I own. Grocery lists, blog post ideas, meeting notes, quick reminders. Anything that starts as words starts in Drafts.
What makes it work is speed. You open the app and start typing. No picking a folder. No choosing a notebook. Just a blinking cursor ready to go. You sort it out later, and Drafts gives you the tools to send that text wherever it needs to end up.
Version 50 Is a Big Deal
Greg Pierce just shipped Drafts v50, and this one matters for anyone who cares about automation.
The Shortcuts support got a complete overhaul. There are now over 50 Shortcuts actions.
You can query drafts by date ranges and location, access version histories, control the interface, and run granular commands for appending, prepending, and editing drafts. The kind of stuff that used to take workarounds now just works.
On the Mac side, the AppleScript integration got a serious expansion. You can query your entire draft library, update drafts, run actions, and work with workspaces. If you’ve ever wanted to build Mac workflows that pull from or push to your Drafts library, this is the update you’ve been waiting for.
The MCP Server for Claude
This is the one that caught my attention. Greg built an MCP server that connects Drafts directly to Claude. If you use Claude Desktop or Claude Code on your Mac, you can now talk to your Drafts library through the AI.
That means you can ask Claude things like “summarize the drafts I created this week” or “find all my drafts tagged with project-x.” You can create new drafts, run actions, and manage your library through natural conversation. It connects through AppleScript locally on your Mac, so your data stays on your machine.
I set this up and it took about two minutes. You can install it right from Claude Desktop’s Extensions settings. Search for “drafts” and it’s there. For anyone already using both Drafts and Claude, this is worth trying immediately.
There are plenty of note apps. What keeps me in Drafts is the philosophy behind it. Text first. Decide later. The capture friction is zero, and the automation layer lets you build exactly the workflows you need.
With v50, that automation layer got considerably deeper. Whether you’re building Shortcuts on your iPhone, writing AppleScript on your Mac, or connecting to AI through MCP, Drafts meets you where you work.
Check out Drafts if you haven’t already. And if you’re already a user, make sure you’re running v50.