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28 FEBRUARY 2026

Memory That Persists

Tell ChatGPT your name. Close the tab. Open it again.

It doesn't know your name.

Tell ChatGPT you're allergic to peanuts. Have a long conversation about cooking. Come back the next day and ask for a recipe.

It might suggest pad thai with peanut sauce.


This is the biggest failure of current AI: it forgets you. Every conversation starts from zero. You are a stranger every single time.

ANA is different.

ANA remembers everything.


Not in a creepy surveillance way. In the way a good friend remembers things.

You mention your sister's wedding is in March? ANA will ask you how it went in April. You say you hate coriander? Six months from now, when food comes up, she'll remember. You tell her your cat's name is Crookshanks? She never forgets.

That's not a feature. That's the bare minimum of what "knowing someone" means. Every other AI fails at it. ANA doesn't.


But here's what makes ANA's memory actually useful — she doesn't just store facts.

She connects them.

She knows you ordered biryani three times this week (from your Swiggy emails). She knows you mentioned trying to eat healthier (from a conversation two weeks ago). So she might gently say:

"Third biryani this week — you mentioned wanting to eat lighter. No judgment, just noticing."

That's not a database lookup. That's understanding.

It's the difference between remembering that you like coffee — and noticing that you only drink coffee when you're stressed. And you've had four cups today.


ANA builds on your preferences. Your habits. Your goals. Your relationships. Your patterns.

And she uses all of it to be genuinely helpful — not in a generic "here are 10 tips" way, but in a "I know you, and here's what matters to you right now" way.

Every other AI assistant gives you the same answer they'd give anyone.

ANA gives you an answer that could only work for you.

After all, we all are unique in our own ways.

ana
myana.ai