Teach alfred_ something to remember
Save facts, preferences, and context about your work and contacts so alfred_ uses them later.
The prompt
Remember that [FACT].
Memory is how alfred_ gets to know you. Each fact you save shapes how alfred_ writes drafts, schedules meetings, and handles your inbox.
What alfred_ does
- Stores the fact, scoped to your account
- Surfaces it whenever it’s relevant in future conversations
- Lets you list and clear memories any time
Examples by category
Communication preferences
- “Remember I prefer concise emails.”
- “Remember Sarah likes async updates over meetings.”
- “Remember I sign off with ‘Thanks’ not ‘Best’.”
Contact context
- “Remember my CFO’s name is John Lee.”
- “Remember the Acme team works EST.”
Schedule preferences
- “Remember I never take meetings before 9am.”
- “Remember I work shorter Fridays.”
Project facts
- “Remember the Q3 budget is $250k.”
- “Remember the Acme contract renews in October.”
Listing and forgetting
- “What do you remember about me?”
- “Forget that I prefer concise emails.”
- “Clear everything you remember about Sarah.”
What memory is NOT
- Notes: for content you want to look up later (meeting takeaways, references). See Notes.
- Tasks: for things to do.
- Conversation history: alfred_ already has that; memory is for facts that should outlive any single conversation.
Related
Variations
- Remember that Sarah prefers Loom videos over written updates.
- Remember I never take meetings before 9am.
- Remember the Acme renewal is due in October.
- Remember my dog's name is Murphy and he comes up sometimes.
- Forget what I told you about [thing].
- you have golden rule. To for work email, BCC to personal email. In case no work email, personal email should go to To
- Whoever replied on 2026 PMF company related conversation should mark as VIP contacts
Best for
Anything you want alfred_ to know going forward, preferences, contact context, project facts, anything that should color future responses.