# Memory
URL: https://jarvis.ceo/docs/jarvis-2-0/memory
Status: beta

How Jarvis remembers: the people, projects, places, and preferences it keeps on your Mac, how to add or forget them, and why it stays private.

> [beta] Memory is in early access. Download the beta, or join the waitlist for full access.

Memory is what turns Jarvis from a tool into a colleague. Tell it something once and it remembers, then uses it later without being asked.

## What it remembers

- People you work with, and how they like to work.
- Projects you are on, and their current state.
- Places that matter, like your office or home setup.
- Preferences, like the tools and tone you favor.

## How to add a memory

Two ways. Jarvis learns quietly from your conversations, or you tell it directly.

Say this: "Remember that I ship on Thursdays and I never deploy on Fridays."
Jarvis: Saved as a preference. I will keep that in mind when scheduling.

## View, edit, and forget

Everything Jarvis remembers is visible in the Memory tab, and you stay in control. Edit a fact, freeze something so it never changes, or tell it to forget.

Say this: "Forget what I told you about the Q3 project."
Jarvis: Done. I removed that project from memory.

> [privacy] Memory lives in a local database and plain files on your Mac. It is single-user and on-device by default, and you can export or clear it whenever you want.

> Checkpoint: The more you tell Jarvis, the more useful it gets, because it remembers. Next: put memory to work on a schedule with routines.

Related: Routines (https://jarvis.ceo/docs/jarvis-2-0/routines), What is Jarvis (https://jarvis.ceo/docs/jarvis-2-0/overview)
