Tools & Resources Archive Details

Let Me Claude That For You

What it is

A tiny “LMGTFY”-style gag tool meant to nudge someone to ask Claude instead of you; exact mechanics and data handling are Unknown / not confirmed.

Gabriel’s notes

Quick take: I love this. It’s basically “Let Me Google That For You” for the AI age — a sarcastic (but admittedly efficient) way to tell someone to go ask Claude about it.

Based on the site name, title, and public discussion, this appears to be a lightweight web page you can send to someone as a passive-aggressive prompt to “just ask Claude.” The exact on-page behavior (what it generates, whether it pre-fills a prompt, which Claude surface it targets, and whether it stores anything) is Unknown / not confirmed from my review, because the page content did not load in a text-only fetch.

I saved this under Prompting because sometimes the best “tool” is a social nudge: stop treating the nearest nerd like a human search bar and go do the 30 seconds of AI triage yourself.

Good fit if you want to:

  • Reduce low-effort DM/Slack questions that should have been a quick AI query first.
  • Set a light “self-serve first” norm without writing a whole policy doc no one will read.
  • Add a little humor to repeated, copy-pasteable Q&A moments.
  • Prompt teammates to include context (ideally after they’ve asked Claude and have a more specific follow-up).

Pricing snapshot (auto-enriched):

Unknown / not confirmed. The site appears to be publicly accessible on the open web, but I did not confirm whether it’s entirely free, ad-supported, or collecting anything in exchange for use.

Work-use / compliance snapshot (auto-enriched):

Unknown / not confirmed whether this site logs queries, embeds prompts in URLs, or redirects through third-party services. Treat anything you type into “funny link generators” as potentially public and permanent:

  • Don’t put client names, confidential project details, API keys, credentials, or regulated data into whatever it asks for.
  • If it generates a shareable URL, assume the URL may contain your text (or be recoverable server-side).
  • In a workplace setting, this is best used as a cultural nudge — not as a substitute for actual documentation, onboarding, or security training.

Alternatives (auto-enriched):

  • Let Me Google That For You (LMGTFY): the original classic for search-engine self-service; use it when the answer is truly “just Google it.” (Unknown / not confirmed current best canonical domain/version.)
  • Let Me Ask Claude Code For You (lmaccfy.com): a similar gag aimed at Claude Code workflows; arguably better if your org is specifically standardizing on Claude Code. (Unknown / not confirmed feature set beyond public description.)

Before you adopt it:

  • Decide when sarcasm is acceptable. (Hint: not when someone’s blocked, new, or anxious.)
  • Pair it with a real “How we ask for help” checklist: what you tried, what you asked Claude, what failed, what you expected.
  • Use it sparingly — like hot sauce. A little improves the meal; a lot ruins the meal and your friendships.

Sources:

  • https://letmeclaudethat.xyz/
  • https://www.reddit.com/r/ClaudeAI/comments/1s9x3e4/letmeclaudethatxyz_so_you_can_be/
  • https://www.letmepromptclaudeforyou.com/
  • https://www.reddit.com/r/ClaudeCode/comments/1sevm1r/let_me_ask_claude_code_for_you_httpslmaccfycom/

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