Computer use lets Claude open apps, click, and type on your screen — so it can finish work even in tools that have no integration. Here's how it works and where a non-developer should start.
Most of the time Claude works through connectors — clean integrations with apps like your calendar or drive. Computer use is the fallback for everything else: instead of an API, Claude controls the screen directly, moving the cursor, clicking, and typing the way you would.
That means it can operate apps that were never built to talk to an AI — older desktop software, niche internal tools, anything with a normal window and buttons.
You don't usually pick computer use on purpose. When Claude needs to do something and there's no connector or tool for it, it falls back to using your screen. That's what makes it powerful for normal work — the long tail of apps that will never have a fancy integration.
It's currently a research-preview feature in Cowork on Pro and Max plans, on both macOS and Windows.
The real unlock is handing off a task and stepping away. You describe the job, Claude works on your machine, and you come back to it finished — files sorted, a form filled, data moved from one app to another.
Think of the chores you'd never automate because they live across three apps with no API. That's exactly the work computer use is for.
Hand-off examples: - Rename and sort this folder of PDFs - Copy these rows into the desktop app - Fill this form from the spreadsheet
Computer use asks before sensitive or risky actions and lets you watch and take over at any time. The smart way in is to start with low-stakes, boring tasks where a mistake costs nothing — file cleanup, simple data entry, organizing screenshots.
Let it drive the chores. Keep the keys to anything involving money, accounts, or things you can't undo.
A starter list of low-stakes desktop jobs to hand Claude first — plus the ones to keep for yourself.