
An AI that remembers your preferences over time is a personal AI assistant that can use past context to make future responses more relevant. Instead of treating every chat like a new session, it learns from what you choose to share.
Preferences can be simple. You may prefer short answers, gentle reminders, a certain planning style, specific food restrictions, a favorite travel pace, or a particular tone for messages. Over time, the AI can use these details to create better suggestions, trackers, lists, and plans.
The important distinction is that preference memory should support you, not trap you. You should be able to update it when your habits change, correct wrong assumptions, and control what is remembered.
Preference memory has a natural shape: durable likes and dislikes belong in it, passing moods do not. An app that remembers you prefer bullet points but forgets last Tuesday's frustration has the balance right.
This is the standard Macaron aims at for preference memory: the assistant should be able to say what it believes you prefer, and changing that belief should take one sentence, not a support ticket.