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Your intern maintains memory across conversations so it never starts from scratch. It remembers your preferences, past instructions, and the context behind your work.

Types of Memory

Long-Term Memory

Durable facts that persist indefinitely:
  • Your name, role, city, and preferences
  • Instructions you’ve given (“always keep emails under 150 words”)
  • Important people and context (“John is my co-founder”)

Short-Term Context

Context from recent conversations — what was discussed and done — that naturally fades as newer conversations take its place.

Daily Notes

A running scratchpad that resets each day. Your intern uses it to track things within a single day without cluttering long-term memory.
Add a note: finished the investor deck draft.
What's in today's notes?

Project Data

Project data is shared, structured context your intern keeps about an ongoing effort — a launch, a client, a campaign. Unlike personal preferences, project data is about the work: goals, key people, status, and reference material your intern pulls in whenever the project comes up.
Start a project called Q3 Launch. The goal is to ship by September 30.
Add to the Q3 Launch project: design owner is Mei, eng owner is Raj.
What's the current status of the Q3 Launch project?

Creating and Managing Memories

Remember: I prefer bullet points over paragraphs in summaries.
What do you remember about me?
Update: my title is now Head of Product, not Product Manager.
Forget the rule about keeping emails under 150 words.

How Memory Shapes Behavior

Your intern automatically loads relevant memory and project data as context on every request — no reminding needed. Tell it once that you always BCC your assistant, and it does so every time it sends mail.

Privacy

Memories and project data are stored securely and accessible only to your account. Delete any of it at any time. See Privacy & Security.