February 24, 2026

How Companion remembers everything

Think about someone you work with closely. They know your projects, your preferences, how you like things done. You never have to re-explain yourself. You just pick up where you left off.

That's what memory does for Companion.

Memory that persists

Companion maintains long-term memory across every session. It remembers your projects, your preferences, the tools you use, the way you like things done. Come back tomorrow, or next month, and it picks up right where you left off.

This is structured knowledge that Companion builds over time. The more you work together, the more it understands you.

It notices the small things

The small things add up. Companion learns that you prefer dark mode mockups. That your reports always need a summary at the top. That your team uses Notion for docs and Slack for standups.

It remembers your active projects, their status, who's involved, and what's blocked. It remembers that last Tuesday you asked it to research a vendor and you haven't followed up yet.

None of this requires you to configure anything. Companion observes how you work and adapts.

Context makes everything faster

When Companion already knows your context, you skip the setup. You say what you need and it already has the background to act on it. A five-minute conversation does the work of a thirty-minute one because you never have to start from scratch.

Over weeks and months, that compounds. Companion understands your patterns, your priorities, how you think about problems. It feels like working with someone who genuinely knows you.

Always learning

Companion's memory updates as your work evolves. When you switch projects, it adjusts. When your preferences change, it adapts. When something becomes irrelevant, it fades.

You stay in control. You can see what Companion remembers, correct it, or tell it to forget something entirely.