Before USB-C, every device you owned had its own charger, and none of them fit each other. Then one plug won, and the drawer full of tangled adapters slowly emptied out. MCP is the same thing happening to AI, and it is quietly the most important shift in what a tool like Claude can actually do. Anthropic, which created the standard, calls it exactly that: USB-C for AI.
This is the eleventh post in a beginner's series on Claude. The first one mapped out the whole tool, and a couple of posts have now pointed at connectors and promised to explain them. This is that explanation, in plain language, with no assumption that you are a developer.
What MCP Actually Is
For most of the short history of AI chatbots, each one lived in a box. It could talk, brilliantly, but it could not reach anything you actually use. If you wanted it to look at your calendar or your files, someone had to build a custom bridge for that one tool and that one AI, and every new combination meant building the bridge again. It did not scale, and most of those bridges never got built.
MCP fixes that by being a common language. It is an open standard, which just means an agreed-on way for any tool to describe itself so that any AI can understand it. Instead of a hundred custom, one-off integrations, a tool speaks MCP once, and every AI that speaks MCP can now work with it. One adapter instead of a drawer full of them. That is the entire idea, and like USB-C, the magic is not the plug, it is that everyone agreed on the same plug.
Why It Matters to You
The practical effect is that Claude stops being a box you talk to and becomes something that can act on the tools you already live in. Your calendar, your documents, a database, hundreds of outside services. Through a connector, which is just an MCP link switched on, Claude can read from and work with those things directly instead of you copying and pasting between them all day. This is the difference between an assistant that gives you advice about your schedule and one that can actually see your schedule.
It is also how the deeper features in this series get wired up. When an earlier post talked about giving Claude a real, lasting memory that follows you across tools, connectors are the how. The memory lives somewhere, and a connector is what lets Claude reach it. MCP is the plumbing underneath a lot of the good stuff.
You Already Have This
Here is the part people miss. You do not build MCP, and you do not need to understand a line of it. Connectors are already in Claude, on every plan including the free one. Turning one on is a settings-level action, closer to linking two apps than to programming anything. The work is not technical. The work is deciding which of your tools is worth connecting.
The Trap Nobody Warns You About
Now the honest catch, because it is a real one. More connectors is not better. When you plug in too many tools at once, Claude gets measurably worse at the job, not better. Faced with a huge pile of possible actions, it makes clumsier choices about which one to reach for, the same way a person handed fifty tools does a task worse than someone handed the three they need. In practice the sweet spot is a small handful of connectors that match what you actually do, not everything you could possibly link. Connect with intent. A focused toolbox beats a cluttered one every time.
Why This Is Bigger Than Claude
It would be easy to hear all this and file it under Claude features. It is not. MCP is an open standard, which means it does not belong to any one company and does not disappear if one product does. It has been adopted broadly across the industry, and standards that get adopted broadly tend to follow the same arc. They start as one company's idea, they outgrow their creator, and they quietly become infrastructure that everything else is built on. USB-C, HTTP, the humble email standard. The sign that MCP matters is not that Claude uses it. It is that it is becoming the thing everyone uses, which is exactly why learning to think in connectors now is worth your time.
Where to Start This Week
Do not connect everything. Pick the one tool you touch most in a normal day, your calendar, your documents, your notes, and turn on that single connector. Then ask Claude to do something real with it, not a demo. See how it feels to have the assistant reach into your actual work instead of talking about it from the outside. One good connection will teach you more than reading ten more paragraphs about the standard.
The walled garden is quietly coming down, and connectors are the door. If you want a structured way to learn which ones are worth it and how to use them well, our free StudioMeyer Academy covers it. Next in the series, we put connectors to work and look at actually automating the repetitive parts of your week.
