Dietmar Fischer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
What if your AI assistant remembered the last meeting, the company policy, your favorite report structure, and that one client who reacts badly to the word innovative?
That sounds useful.
It also sounds slightly dangerous.
Today, we look at the new frontier of AI memory, not just making chatbots remember more, but teaching them what kind of memory they are using.
Because a good AI assistant should know the difference between this happened once, this is company policy and this is how we always do the report.
Get that right and AI becomes a serious business partner.
Get it wrong and you have built a very confident robot with a messy notebook and access to your workflow.
The AI that finally remembers the project.
Professor Giffart here, welcoming you back to A Beginner's Guide to AI, the podcast where we take the shiny, confusing, occasionally suspicious world of artificial intelligence and make it useful for working humans.
Today we are talking about memory.
Not human memory, which lets you remember one embarrassing sentence from 2009, but forget why you opened the fridge.
We are talking about AI memory.
How modern AI agents can remember projects, facts, preferences and ways of working.
And this matters, because an AI without memory is like hiring a very polite assistant with total amnesia.
Imagine you explain everything to a new assistant.
The client project, the brand voice, the report format, the fact that Steve from accounting hates long emails, the fact that the travel client does not want the word paradise because it has appeared in too many brochures and must now be legally retired.
The assistant nods, produces good work and you feel hope.
Then the next morning they have forgotten everything, so you explain it again and again and again.
By Friday, you are not using an assistant anymore.
You are running a training program for a cheerful goldfish in business casual.