Categories: AITech

Memories.ai And Qualcomm Unveil An AI Assistant That Actually Remembers Your Workday

In the modern workplace, the greatest thief of productivity isn’t the long meeting or the cluttered inbox, it’s the “context gap.” We spend a staggering portion of our day retracing our digital steps: hunting for a chart we saw in a Slack thread, trying to recall a decision made in a transient Zoom chat, or manually copy-pasting data from a PDF into an AI chatbot just to get it up to speed.
Sponsored

The computer, for all its processing power, has historically been an amnesiac. It knows where your files are stored, but it has no idea what you actually did today.

That is about to change.

Today Memories.ai and tech giant Qualcomm announced a partnership to launch what they are calling the first true “on-screen visual memory” assistant for laptops. Powered by Memories.ai’s Large Visual Memory Model (LVMM) 2.0, the assistant aims to turn the PC from a passive tool into a proactive executive assistant that remembers everything you’ve seen and done.

The End of the “Where Was That?” Era

The core of the technology is a shift in how AI interacts with the user. While standard LLMs like ChatGPT require you to feed them information, Memories.ai’s assistant lives as a “memory layer” on the device. It continuously captures, organizes, and indexes on-screen activity, across every app, tab, and video call, allowing users to retrieve information using natural language.

“Millions of hours of productivity are lost every year from context switching and starting projects from scratch,” says Shawn Shen, Co-founder and CEO of Memories.ai. “This product will turn your laptop into your personalized executive assistant.”

Instead of hunting for a specific file name, a user can simply ask: “What did we decide about the pricing strategy in yesterday’s meeting?” or “Find that chart I was looking at while I was on the call with the design team.” The AI doesn’t just find the document; it takes the user back to the exact visual moment that context was created.

The Power of the Edge: Privacy Meets Performance

A frequent concern with “always-on” digital memory is privacy. Memories.ai and Qualcomm are addressing this head-on by keeping the process on-device. By leveraging Qualcomm’s specialized expertise in edge computing and AI processing, the assistant avoids the cloud entirely for its memory indexing.

“By combining Qualcomm’s expertise in edge computing and on-device AI with Memories.ai’s technology, we can enable assistants that are more context-aware and responsive,” says Vinesh Sukumar, VP of Product Management at Qualcomm Technologies.

Sponsored

This “privacy-first” architecture means the “work memory” remains the exclusive property of the user, never leaving the laptop’s hardware. It also allows for “Context Completion”, a feature that automatically drafts prompts for other AI agents (like ChatGPT) by pulling the necessary background context from the user’s recent activity, saving them the tedious task of manual briefing.

A Pedigree of Silicon Valley Heavyweights

Memories.ai isn’t a newcomer to the high-stakes world of computer vision. Founded in 2024 by a team of former Meta researchers, the company has quickly gathered a “Who’s Who” of venture backing, including Fusion Fund, Susa Ventures, Samsung Next, and Seedcamp.

Their LVMM technology represents a new frontier in AI. While the industry has been obsessed with text and image generation, Memories.ai is focused on persistence, the ability for an AI to see, understand, and recall visual experiences over unlimited timeframes.

The Road Ahead

The implications for the enterprise are significant. Beyond simple search, the assistant offers:

  • Visual-Based Summaries: Creating meeting notes based on what was actually shown on screen (slides, demos) rather than just a transcript.
  • Daily Recaps: An automated timeline of the day’s highlights and auto-generated to-do lists based on workflows.
  • Background Reconstruction: The ability to “pick up where you left off” on complex tasks that span multiple applications.

As the “AI PC” becomes the new battleground for hardware manufacturers, the Memories.ai and Qualcomm partnership signals a move away from AI as a novelty toward AI as essential infrastructure.

The assistant is currently available for developer preview at CES, with a full consumer and enterprise rollout expected in the first quarter of 2026. For a workforce currently drowning in digital noise, a computer that finally remembers might be the ultimate life raft.

Companies can learn more at https://memories.ai

rssfeeds-admin

Share
Published by
rssfeeds-admin

Recent Posts

Mattress technology co-developed by Sioux Falls entrepreneur gains national reach

Feb. 26, 2026 An innovative gel mattress material and design patented by a Sioux Falls…

15 minutes ago

The War No One Wanted

November 11, 2025, New York City Dear Salih, You asked me to write an essay…

20 minutes ago

Relational database network Tableland.xyz supports structured data for web3 applications

Tableland.xyz – Cloudflare customer – (United States)  Developers across the blockchain ecosystem use .xyz domains…

20 minutes ago

Red Bulls Unveil New Head Coach, Stadium Food Upgrades for 2026 Season

Red Bull New York introduced head coach Michael Bradley and announced stadium improvements at Media…

34 minutes ago

Chick-fil-A Seeks Approval for Route 206 Location in Hillsborough Amid Traffic Worries

Last week, the Hillsborough Board of Adjustment listened to professionals speak about Chick-fil-A’s plan. The…

34 minutes ago

New Jersey Companies Cut Over 3,500 Jobs in Early 2026

More than 3,500 workers lost their jobs in New Jersey through this February. Companies announced…

34 minutes ago

This website uses cookies.