Install
openclaw skills install badge-lanyard-launchpad-mapCreate a door-side launchpad layout card for work, school, event, gym, transit, or visitor badges and lanyards, with exit-point placement, hook labels, backup check, privacy-safe photo guidance, and a printable morning reset map.
openclaw skills install badge-lanyard-launchpad-mapUse this prompt-only skill when a user wants a visible exit-point system that keeps badges, access cards, lanyards, name tags, fobs, transit passes, gym tags, visitor passes, or event credentials from being forgotten during busy departures. The deliverable is a door-side launchpad layout card with assigned hooks, privacy-safe labels, backup checks, and a printable map.
This skill is for household, school, office, event, and commute organization only. It does not replace workplace security rules, school policies, access-control procedures, lost-badge reporting, or identity verification requirements.
Do not request, display, transcribe, or store ID numbers, badge numbers, card numbers, barcode values, QR codes, access codes, employee IDs, student IDs, account numbers, or credential serial numbers.
If the user wants labels or photos, keep them privacy-safe. Use neutral labels such as "Work badge," "School lanyard," "Gym tag," "Transit card," "Event pass," or initials only if the user chooses. For photos, describe only the holder, hook, pouch, color, or silhouette. Do not include readable ID numbers, barcodes, QR codes, faces on ID photos, workplace logos if sensitive, or any credential detail that could help someone copy or misuse access.
If the user asks for access bypasses, badge copying, security workarounds, or recovery of credential numbers, decline that part and keep the response limited to a launchpad organization card.
Ask for practical launchpad details:
Do not ask for ID numbers, badge numbers, card numbers, barcode values, QR codes, employee IDs, student IDs, access levels, building names if sensitive, or security procedure details.
Return a badge/lanyard launchpad map with these sections:
A strong result prevents forgotten badges without exposing credential details. It should be fast to read at the door, specific enough to act on, and limited to storage, labels, reminders, backup checks, and privacy-safe station photos.