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How Kiki remembers you

The more you use Kiki, the better it gets at helping you specifically. It remembers what you've asked for, the facts that matter to your life, how you like recurring tasks done, and your preferences — so you're not starting from scratch every time.

What it remembers

  • What happened — "yesterday you asked me to summarize the quarterly report."
  • Facts about your world — "your reports live in the finance vault."
  • How to do your recurring tasks — "to prep the weekly digest, pull these sources and format it like this."
  • Your preferences — "you like short summaries and metric units."

After it finishes a task, Kiki reflects on what it learned, so the next time you ask for something similar it's faster and more on-target — without you configuring anything.

It stays on your device

This is the important part: Kiki's memory lives on your hardware, privately, by default. What your computer learns about you doesn't get shipped off somewhere. Syncing memory across your own devices is possible, but always an explicit choice you make — never automatic.

You're in charge of it

Because it's local and versioned, you can review what Kiki remembers, prune it, or reset it — without touching your actual files. Memory is Kiki's understanding of you; your data is your stuff. The two are kept separate, and both are yours.

Memory vs. your data

Your data is your notes, photos, and files. Memory is what Kiki has learned about how you like to work. An app stores a note; Kiki remembers that you asked it to rewrite that note last week, and that you prefer a certain tone.

Kiki OS, Desktop & SDK are open source. See Licensing.