
A friend sent me a screenshot of the App Store page with the caption "Is this any good?" I downloaded it.
The tagline at the top of the listing said Your AI for Life. I stared at that phrase longer than I meant to. "Life" is a big word for any app to put on its store page, and I wanted to know if it meant what I thought.
If you're the kind of person who's downloaded six AI apps this year and kept maybe one — and even that one feels more like a tool than a presence — this might feel familiar. Not a review. Just notes from a few days with something that calls itself AI for life.
Method note: about a week of daily use on iOS 2.0 with AgnesClaw enabled. I work in adjacent personal-AI tooling — I'll disclose where it matters.

The phrase isn't subtle. It implies something that stays with you across days, across small things you mention, across the version of yourself Monday morning versus Sunday night.
That's a lot to promise. Most apps don't survive my fourth day. The ones that do remember something I said without me filing it somewhere. Opening Agnes, the question was whether it remembered me when I came back tomorrow.
Before writing about my experience, I want to be careful — the name "Agnes" gets used in more than one place online.
The app I downloaded is Agnes on the App Store by Singapore Sapiens Technology, on iOS and Google Play. AppBrain data shows Agnes has crossed 5 million Android downloads at roughly 40,000 installs per day. The site at agnes-ai.com describes an AI gateway and API platform — that's the parent company Sapiens AI, a different surface. Older reviews still call Agnes a "team workspace." Today it's a mobile consumer app.
The store listing highlights AI Search (voice + instant answers), AI Games, AI Image and Video Generation through templates, AI PPT creation, and AgnesClaw — a one-click deployable agent for 24/7 task automation. Agnes 2.0 release notes confirm AgnesClaw as the major feature of this version. Founder Bruce Yang, an NUS PhD candidate, has positioned the product as combining real-time search with a "personal memory engine" — language worth holding onto.
So: search + creation + automation + some social features.
Older marketing material describes Agnes as a "shared memory" team workspace. Current App Store changelogs mention group features — group creation, an "Agnes Newbie Group," emoji reactions — but I couldn't find official documentation spelling out how memory works inside those groups, what gets remembered, or how to control it. Open questions, not facts.

Across a few days, did Agnes feel like something I was returning to, or opening from scratch?
Day one I told it I'd been trying to walk more in the evenings. Day three I asked for something unrelated — drafting a short note. It didn't bring up the walking thing. Doesn't mean it forgot. But nothing surfaced that made me feel "oh, it remembered."
The app does remember which screen I left on — the changelog lists this as a feature. UI state. Not the same as remembering me.
There's a meaningful technical distinction. Most chatbots rely on a context window — the model sees only what fits in the current session, and earlier exchanges drop out when you start fresh. Persistent memory is a separate architectural commitment: a system storing facts about you outside the context window and retrieving them when relevant. Across a week with Agnes, I didn't see behavior suggesting the second kind was active by default.
I looked for a memory settings page. Didn't find one clearly labeled. I could clear chat history, but that's different from "remember this, forget that." For an app whose name implies long-term presence, I'd expect a confident answer in the help docs. I couldn't find one.
This is where Agnes is strong. Slide deck? Made one. Short video from a template? Generated it. AgnesClaw handled multi-step tasks — sometimes well, sometimes producing the generic output any agent might give. As a personal AI assistant for one-off creation tasks, it's competent and fast.
But "for life" is broader. It implies the assistant knows something about my actual life — the running plans I keep abandoning, how I phrase requests when I'm tired. A separate capability from spinning up a deck.

Disclosure first: I've also been using Macaron, which positions itself around personal memory. I work in the broader personal-AI space — informed but not neutral.
The architectural contrast is concrete. Macaron's published materials describe a 671-billion-parameter model with a dedicated memory token activated at every interaction — distinct from regular reasoning tokens — that handles retrieval, summarization, and contextual updates. A different philosophy from a context-window assistant that happens to log chat history. The first time Macaron surfaced something I'd mentioned three days earlier, I paused — not because it was magic, but because being remembered was the actual product, not a side effect.
Agnes is optimized for doing things fast across many formats. Tools built around persistent memory are optimized for staying with you over time.
Anywhere you read about Agnes, you'll find shared memory mentioned. Worth being careful with it.
One independent review of Agnes flagged "insufficient data" on memory scope and controls. Official materials emphasize the idea of continuity, but the technical scope — what's user-level, team-level, what admins control, how long things persist — isn't publicly documented.
Plenty of third-party listings describe Agnes as having robust shared memory, some listing encryption standards or permission models. None link back to official documentation. I'm treating "shared memory" as a positioning claim, not a verified feature.
Even if Agnes retains context within a group, that's different from personal memory. Project context says "this document is about X." Personal memory says "you told me three weeks ago you don't drink coffee after 2 PM, so this 4 PM meeting might not work." Both useful. Not the same.
The site at agnes-ai.com describes an API platform and AI gateway ranked on PinchBench — a developer surface. Claims about model availability, free credits, and gateway capabilities belong to that side of the company and don't automatically transfer to the consumer app.

Agnes is doing something real — just not necessarily what the tagline suggests.
If you want one app that can search, draft a deck, generate a quick video, and hand off a multi-step task to an agent — Agnes is reasonable. Templates work, AgnesClaw handles routine automation acceptably. For people whose daily friction is "too many separate tools," Agnes addresses that. Real value.
But if what you want is AI for life in the sense the tagline implies — an assistant that remembers what you said, learns how you think, feels like a presence — Agnes isn't currently built around that promise in a way I could verify in a week. For that, you probably need a different layer. A product designed around persistent memory sits in a different category than an all-in-one productivity engine. The two might be complementary rather than substitutes.
Maybe what most of us need isn't one app that does everything, but a creation layer and a memory layer that coexist.
Does Agnes separate personal activity from collaborative workspace context?
I couldn't find official documentation explaining the boundary between personal chats and group context. Changelogs mention group features, but what's shared versus private isn't publicly documented. Test it before relying on the separation.
Can Agnes data be exported before switching to another AI tool?
The official privacy policy describes data handling, but I couldn't find a documented export pathway for chat history or personalization data. Generated content — decks, images, videos — appears downloadable as files. Worth asking support before committing long-term.
What happens to saved content when an Agnes workspace is deleted?
The published policy doesn't spell this out. Specific behavior for Agnes groups and any associated memory isn't clearly stated. Confirm before deleting anything you might want back.
Which private routines should stay outside a collaborative AI workspace?
A personal heuristic. Anything depending on long-term personal context — health patterns, mood notes, private goals — belongs in a tool whose design centers on personal memory. Collaborative workspaces are built for teams thinking together, not the version of yourself you only show in private.
That's where I'll leave it. Agnes AI is a capable creation and execution tool that calls itself an AI for life, and the second half of that name is the part I couldn't verify in a week. The team is iterating fast — the 2.0 release shows real ambition, and that may change.
If you try it, the question to hold onto is the one I started with: does it remember me when I come back tomorrow? I'll check again next month.
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