Launching today

Samvid Memory Studio
One install. Every AI on your machine finally remembers.
4 followers
One install. Every AI on your machine finally remembers.
4 followers
You've explained your stack, your preferences, your decisions, dozens of times over & over again. Inspired by human memory, Samvid Memory Studio solves that recursive loop. Install once, and every AI tool on your machine shares a persistent, local memory. Claude knows what Cursor learned. Cursor remembers what you decided last week. Memories gather. Connections deepen. Meaning emerges. No cloud. No account. Runs entirely on your machine.






Hi Product Hunt 👋 I'm Anand, and I've been quietly obsessed with a genuine problem.
Every AI assistant I used was great in the moment and completely clueless the next day. New chat. Blank slate. We had been through this before, but it didn't remember. I would explain my setup again. My preferences again. The context that took 20 minutes to establish, again.
The frustrating part? These models are intelligent, no doubt. It's a memory problem. And I did not find anything that was solving it at the layer where it actually matters , across tools, across sessions, locally, privately.
So I spent the better part of a year building Samvid Memory Studio.
It's a local memory layer that sits underneath your AI tools. Think of it as a shared brain that multiple AI applications can read from and write to , one that remembers semantically, not just verbatim. Not "what did the user type" but "what does the user mean, prefer, and care about."
What I built and why:
🧠 Semantic memory : Inspired by how humans actually recall things (by association, not keyword search or words)
🏠 Local-first : Your memories live on your device. No cloud, no subscriptions, no strangers reading the context
🔌 Three interfaces : MCP for AI tools, terminal for automation, desktop app for humans who just want to see what's stored
🤝 Shared across apps : One memory layer, multiple assistants. They finally get to talk to the same "you".
When an assistant picks up context from multiple related sessions or related query without being told to. That's when it stops feeling like software and starts feeling like something different, personal & friendly.
I'd love feedback from people who care about continuity. What's the memory problem in your stack that nobody's solved yet?