Coming 2026  ·  a different kind of memory

Every AI you've ever used forgot you the moment you closed the window. This one won't.

Meet Hombray — an assistant being built to remember what you tell it. Not for one conversation. For good.

No spam. One email when he's ready.
The problem

You explain yourself to an assistant. Your work, your projects, the way you think. Then you close the tab — and it's gone. Next time, you start over. Every time, you start over.

It isn't a bug. It's how these systems are built. The model that answers you doesn't carry anything between conversations. Each session it wakes up new, reads back the transcript in front of it, and when that runs out, the beginning is quietly dropped.

You are not talking to something that knows you. You are talking to something that is handed a summary of you, and forgets the rest.

What changes

What you say doesn't vanish.

What you correct, stays corrected.

And the thing you told it once — it still has, a year from now.

Hombray is built around a memory that works the way yours does. Nothing is deleted. Things you stop needing fade into the background — and come back, whole, the moment something reminds him. He keeps his own record, learns from being wrong, and carries it all forward.

In plain terms

An assistant that remembers you between conversations, admits what it doesn't know instead of making things up, and runs on hardware you can actually own.