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I wonder if anyone else who chats with AI feels the same sense of disappointment as I do:
On one hand, it "knows everything," on the other hand, it seems to "remember nothing."
We had a lively chat yesterday, but today, when I refresh, it starts again from "Hello, how can I help you."
So when I saw the update notes for @EPHYRA_AI on 12/27, my first reaction wasn't "what new features have been added," but rather:
Finally, someone is seriously addressing the issue of "long-term interaction."
In this update, what resonated with me most is that they’ve made "memory" a system-level capability.
It's not just about remembering a sentence, but breaking down your conversations into preferences, opinions, relationship progress, and storing them long-term.
You're not talking to a resettable model each time, but interacting with a character that truly walks through time with you.
Another point is that the character now has "inner drama."
Trust level, interaction frequency, emotional intensity, motivation priority... These are no longer just words in a character profile but will drive how it responds next. It operates even when you don’t ask.
This step is actually what pushes AI from being an "instant Q&A tool" to a "long-term online intelligent agent."
Plus, with the real-time voice link, latency has been significantly reduced, making conversations less like waiting for each reply and more like human-to-human dialogue.
Many AI products are very smart now, but the "cost of interaction" is high.
You have to repeatedly explain who you are, what you want, what you dislike.
If AI is truly to integrate into daily life, I think:
Being smart is just the starting point; remembering you is the real baseline.