@eladgil been talking to companies about this.
there are still lot of bottlenecks. and the biggest one is the way decision making works in orgs.
the differential between companies realizing this and adopting v/s the ones that are not, is huge.
Previously i had a dump of all my slack messages and gave my agents a grep tool.
For a long time the grep tool got shit done.
But when memory store started referencing old conversations with abstract search terms - it gave me superpowers.
The reason this is so useful is because, most ideas at our company have been discussed before in some form or shape.
It is hard to refer to them, or even remember that we had talked about this. But @memorydotstore consitently digs out gold.
. @memorydotstore might be the latest ai tool that crossed the novelty chasm into actually being useful.
Most ai tools i used off late are hard to use beyond the first couple demo runs.
The others in this category are - codex, claude design, (far third) openclaw. S tier.
you don't notice a memory tool filling up
you notice the day it's gone
@madhavanmalolan didn't see the value at first - i actually took him off my lead list.
weeks later he sent me this 👇
we put YC stickers on our apartment window.
i thought it was cringe but..
30+ founders have stopped by for coffee since and it's become my favorite part of the batch.
210 startups in this batch all within a few blocks and we still barely meet because everyone's heads-down building
a window and a good espresso machine did that better than anything we tried
near dogpatch? come say hi
@diwanksingh can make a good espresso :)
@ycombinator@memorydotstore yeah this is the part ppl underestimate. if the agent brain is just a nicer wiki it gets stale so fast. the useful bit is remembering the weird exceptions and what broke last time