AI has a working memory limit—it can only 'see' so much conversation before it starts forgetting earlier context and contradicting itself. Understanding this constraint helps you structure long interactions smartly: summarizing progress, starting fresh conversations for new topics, and knowing when to refresh context explicitly.
Think of an AI's context window like the "working memory" of a human conversation. Imagine talking to a friend in a noisy café. For the first 10 minutes, they remember everything you said. But after 45 minutes of rambling back and forth, they start forgetting details from the beginning. That's a context window—the amount of recent conversation an AI can actually keep in its active awareness.
Here's what's happening technically (but don't worry if this feels abstract): AI doesn't have actual memory. It reads your entire conversation thread every single time it responds. But there's a hard limit to how much text it can read per conversation. It's like a photographer who can only develop prints from the last 50 pages of a notebook—anything before that is invisible.
You've probably experienced this: You told Claude about your project goals in message one. By message 15, you ask a follow-up question and Claude responds as if it never heard about your goals. That's because the context window ran out, and it only "sees" the last 10-15 messages (rough numbers vary by which AI you use).
Claude can handle more context than ChatGPT. Some newer models can handle way more. But all of them have limits. Knowing this limit exists is half the battle.
Try this: In your next longer AI conversation (10+ messages), notice when the AI seems to forget something you said earlier. Then start a fresh conversation, paste a summary of what you've covered at the top, and continue. You'll see how much better the AI performs.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.