
AI memory differs from a context window because memory is meant to persist across conversations, while a context window is the amount of information the AI can consider in the current session. They are related, but not the same.
A context window works like short-term attention. If you paste a long document or discuss a topic in one chat, the AI can use that information while it remains within the active context. But once the session changes or the context becomes too large, earlier details may be lost.
Memory is closer to long-term recall. It may store selected preferences, facts, or patterns so the assistant can use them later. Good memory should be selective, editable, and transparent, because not every detail should be saved.
This difference explains why bigger context windows do not equal better memory. A window holds everything temporarily and indiscriminately; memory should hold a few durable facts deliberately, with you as the editor.
The best memory experience is selective and correctable. It should save only what improves repeated help, and it should let you change or remove details when your preferences or comfort level changes.