Would you like to make your own app? Claude AI can now make applications that you can even publish directly through Claude without needing to know coding or anything related to it. Let's start wondering how this works. Of course, start by opening the Claude artificial intelligence at claude.ai. After this, log in and then go ask Claude to make you an app. And in this example, I'm asking it to make me a phone app that would convert the image to webp format and reduce its size. I'll then send this to Claude for him to think about. Claude will then start coding this application, which may take some time. While coding, you can see on the side how code appears here. When the application is complete, this code will of course be replaced by the application itself. Later. And after a while, the application will be ready. The application will open on this page and you can test it here. For example, here I can now click the Choose image button to select an image from my computer. After this, it will automatically reduce it. And here it says that the image is saved by long pressing. In this case, of course, I'm on a computer, so I right-click. The instructions could perhaps be updated a bit so that it also states that you can use the right mouse button on a computer. I'm saving this image to my computer and now naming it Anonymous.webp. Here is the picture information. As we can see, it is in webp format and scaled down so that it was six hundred pixels larger in width as instructed in those instructions . So this program works just fine. Now, however, I would like to share this application with others so that others can also use it to reduce the size of their images. I can select Publish from here at the top. After doing this, a short window like this will appear, where you will see some terms of use and you can click the Publish and copy link. Once you have done this, the application is published. This link can then be sent to anyone. This is indeed optimized for smartphones now, so it looks a bit awkward on a computer screen, but it works here too. I'll command choose image from here and then I can start using this to reduce the size of the images. Or anyone else can start using this. If you later open a chat where you have made an application, like here is another application I have made, you will find a link to the application artifact here, which you can click to access it again. If the application is updated, you will also see the version here. For example, I tweaked this application a bit and now it's version twenty. I click on this version and this particular application opens on this page. In this case, this is an app that removes EXIF metadata from your photos, and specifically location data. And that's how this has been published. Here I can click the Publish button. From here you can later copy the hyperlink using the Copy link command, or you can remove the link by selecting Unpublish, which will make the link stop working. This application has actually been released, and if you want to test how it works, use the following address. The short address for this is bit.ly/datapois and it will open the metadata remover for you. Here you can upload your own image and it will remove all metadata from this image. Most importantly, it specifically removes the metadata that shows the location of the image. So, if your camera has recorded a location and you want to clean up the image, here is an app you can use for free. What if you want to make changes to the app after it's been released? Let's go back to this earlier application that reduces the size of images. These instructions tell you, after the image is reduced, that you should long press on the image. I'll give this Claude an order to change it. After providing the repair instructions, I press enter and send Cloude to update this application. And here again, it takes time to update, depending on whether it's a small or large update. Claude is the smartest in that if it updates the application, it doesn't rewrite the entire application code, but only writes the parts it deems necessary. That is, it looks for parts of this code that need to be changed and then updates them. Now that this has been updated, I can of course test the application here, but once I've tested and verified that it works, I need to publish this again using the Publish command. The previous link still leads to that previous version, not to this new updated version. I'm going to use the publish command here and this will now create a completely new link. I'll also use the command Publish and copy link from here. And thus a new link has been created. If you want to test this new feature, head to bit pistely via reduce image and there you can test this new version, which is now better optimized for the computer and converts your image to webp format and reduces it. However, I have now released several versions of this application. The previous versions are of course worse now and I don't want to get rid of them. They are actually still published, but if I go back to previous versions, like here is version four, which had minor technical problems. I select this and it appears here on the side . I command published here and I can command unpublish here to remove the publication of this previous version. There's also the original version here, which was poorly optimized for the computer. I select it, and from there I also command published and unpublished. This has no effect on that latest version, so if we go back to this latest one, version seven in this case, we look here, we see that it's still published. Of course, this publication could also be canceled. This way you can choose which version to keep as published. Please note that if you have already shared a www link, the www link to the previous version will not be updated when you publish a new version. Each new version creates a completely new link to this application and it is recommended to delete previous versions. So this doesn't put the app in Apple's App Store or anything like that, but it creates a web application for you that runs from the web address you shared it from. And of course, depending on how you request the app, and what kind of app you request, they can usually also be the ones that work perfectly on a mobile phone. Of course, if you ask for an app that is optimized for mobile, you will get a more mobile-optimized app. If you ask for an application optimized for your computer, you can get one. Of course, you can also request a progressive application that would work in both environments. However, this works very simply and does not require any coding or development experience. It's worth remembering that very complex applications may be beyond its capabilities, so it's best to use this for making simple and straightforward applications. But if you want to try out application development in the easiest way possible, there 's no easier way than this. I hope this video was useful. If so, be sure to subscribe to my channel. Here you will learn more about artificial intelligence and digital skills every single day. It's also worth becoming a member of the channel. Channel members on YouTube get to watch my upcoming videos in advance. They get a few other benefits too. And of course I am very grateful to each and every member, but also to you for watching this video until the end. WebOpe thanks and acknowledges.