
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently announced via his personal X account the introduction of the “Memory” feature within the ChatGPT service. This capability enables the system to recall users’ previous interactions, sparing them from having to repeatedly reintroduce shared information. As a result, ChatGPT can respond more swiftly and offer more contextually relevant suggestions and insights.
Currently, this feature is being gradually rolled out to users subscribed to the ChatGPT Pro and ChatGPT Plus plans. For those concerned about the retention of personal behavioral data, OpenAI has provided the option to manually disable the feature, safeguarding individual privacy. Additionally, users can initiate temporary chats, wherein ChatGPT retains contextual understanding during the session without storing any of the exchanged data permanently.
This enhancement brings notable convenience to frequent users of AI-powered services. It eliminates the need to reestablish prior context with each new interaction, allowing ChatGPT to seamlessly recall the nature and tone of earlier exchanges.
Google, too, has adopted a similar approach with the launch of its Gemini 2.0 Flash Thinking model, which includes a memory-like design that allows Gemini to recognize and adapt to user preferences over time, thereby delivering a more personalized conversational experience.
Gemini 2.0 Flash Thinking also supports multimodal input, enabling it to process images and text simultaneously. In handling complex queries, it systematically deconstructs problems into manageable components to arrive at accurate and coherent solutions.
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