Stella remembers, the way a good friend would.
It holds on to the things that matter to you, sets the rest aside, and brings something up only when it actually helps. No setup, no digging.
A few things it never forgets.
The essentials — who you are and how you like to work — stay pinned. Every conversation starts already knowing the basics, so you never have to reintroduce yourself.
It jots things down now, and tidies up later.
While you work, Stella quietly drops little notes into a pile. On its own time it goes back through them and folds everything into a clean, lasting memory — the way you make sense of a busy day after sleeping on it.
It can keep light notes on what's in front of you.
This one is off by default. If you choose to turn it on, Stella keeps a short, rolling note of what you've been looking at — so “that thing from earlier” isn't a mystery. It stays on your computer, and you can switch it off any time.
It speaks up only when a memory helps.
Stella doesn't pour everything it knows into every reply. When you say “that” or “yesterday,” it quietly looks up the one thing that fits and works it into the answer.
It's just plain files on your computer.
No cloud memory, no mystery database, nothing kept on our servers. Your memory is a folder of text you can open, read, and delete whenever you want.