Dietmar Fischer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
An AI that remembers the meeting, knows the policy, follows the process and keeps the current task in focus.
Not because it has become human, but because we are learning how to design memory properly.
The big question is no longer only, what can this AI generate?
The better question is, what does this AI remember and what kind of memory is it using right now?
Four kinds of memory.
One much smarter assistant.
AI memory sounds simple at first.
The machine remembers things.
Lovely.
Give it a tiny digital notebook and let it get on with the job.
But that is where the trouble begins, because remembering things is not one job.
It is several jobs.
Human memory is not one neat cupboard either.
We remember what we are doing right now, what happened yesterday, what facts are generally true, and how to do familiar tasks without thinking through every tiny step.
AI agents are starting to copy that idea, not because they have become human, but because business work needs different kinds of context.
A chatbot can survive with short-term context.
A business assistant cannot.
A chatbot can answer, write me an email.
An AI agent might need to remember the project, check the CRM, follow company policy, write in the right format, send the draft to the right person, and avoid accidentally promising the client a discount that finance will later discover and treat as a crime scene.
That requires memory with structure.