Pikes Peak mountain range — Peak AI Design Colorado Springs
Peak AI Design — local-first memory for autonomous AI

We Gave Our Autonomous AI a Memory That Never Forgets — Locally

Most AI assistants have amnesia. Close the window, and they forget your project, your decisions, your context — so you re-explain everything tomorrow. For a business, that’s a dealbreaker.

This week we fixed it. We built a local-first, lossless memory brain for our autonomous AI stack and wired it into both of our agents at once — the coding side and Hermes, the autonomous orchestrator that now runs our operation. (As the stack matured, we moved to Hermes from our earlier OpenClaw runtime.) One shared memory, across every agent, that remembers verbatim and recalls by meaning: ask “why did we choose X?” and it returns the actual decision, not a lossy summary.

The part that matters for business: it all runs locally. Your data never touches someone else’s cloud. For regulated operators — ISPs, or anyone with an in-house-data mandate — that’s the difference between “we can’t use AI” and “this is exactly what we needed.”

And it isn’t a toy. This is a component of Peak Stack — our turnkey “AI that runs your business out of the box.” When we deploy for a client, the AI learns their business from their own history on install. Day one, it already knows them.

We don’t show slideware. We built it, we run our own company on it, and we’ll deploy it for yours.

See what Peak AI Design is building →

Comments