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Daily Reports

At the end of the day (or whenever you need a moment of reflection), you can ask Atlas to generate a summary of what you’ve done. It pulls from your daily note, tasks, and vault activity to give you a quick picture of your day’s output.

Just ask Atlas in chat:

  • “Generate a daily report”
  • “What did I accomplish today?”
  • “Give me a summary of my day”
  • “What did I get done this week?”

Atlas will look at your daily note, completed tasks, and notes created or updated during the period you asked about, then produce a concise summary.

A typical daily report covers:

  • Tasks completed — checkboxes you marked done today
  • Notes created — new files added to your vault
  • Notes updated — existing files you edited
  • Key themes — a brief synthesis of what you worked on, based on the content of your notes

The report is conversational rather than a rigid template — Atlas describes your day in plain language rather than just listing files.

Daily reports are a natural fit for journaling. After generating a report, you can ask Atlas to save it:

  • “Save this summary to my daily note”
  • “Add this to a file called 2026-02-24-review.md”

Over time, these summaries become a record of your productivity that you can search and reflect on.

You’re not limited to daily reports. Try:

  • “What did I accomplish this week?”
  • “Summarize my work over the past two weeks”
  • “What have I been focused on this month?”

Atlas looks across the relevant date range in your daily notes and produces a higher-level synthesis.


Next: Google Calendar