Using Memory: Case and Company Memories
Andri can remember information you tell it and use that context in future conversations. You can save details for a specific case or make them available across your entire firm.
Remember in This Case
To save information for the current case only, just tell Andri naturally:
Remember in this case that my client Sarah Chen is the defendant, not the plaintiff. The plaintiff is her former business partner David Martinez.Or:
Remember that the key date is March 15, 2023—that's when the contract was signed, not when it was breached.Andri will use this information in all future responses within this case. It won't appear in other cases.
Case memory is perfect for clarifying confusing details. If documents contradict each other or use ambiguous terms, tell Andri what's actually correct.
Always Remember (Company-Wide)
To save information for every case across your firm, use "always":
Always remember that we charge €250/hour for partners, €175/hour for associates, and €125/hour for paralegals.Or:
Always remember that we don't handle criminal defense cases, but we do take white-collar regulatory matters.This becomes available to Andri in every case, for every team member at your firm.
Company-wide memories stay within your firm—never shared outside your organization.
Practical Examples
Correct recurring mistakes:
Remember in this case that "the Company" refers to TechStart BV, not our client. Our client is the investor group.Set firm preferences:
Always remember that we prefer settling employment disputes before litigation, unless discrimination or retaliation is alleged.Track complex relationships:
Remember that Lisa Wang is both a witness and a minority shareholder—she's cooperating with us but has a financial interest in the outcome.Define firm-wide terminology:
Always remember that when we say "standard retainer" we mean €5,000 upfront with monthly invoicing against that deposit.When to Use Each Type
Case memory is best for:
Clarifying ambiguous names, dates, or terms in case documents
Tracking relationships between parties (who's hostile, who's cooperating)
Noting procedural deadlines or court-specific requirements
Correcting errors in uploaded documents
Company memory is best for:
Your firm's billing rates and fee structures
Practice areas you handle or avoid
Standard contract terms you always use
Internal policies (e.g., conflict check procedures)
How It Differs from Reminders
The "remember" command stores information for Andri to reference. The /remind command schedules an email notification.
Use "remember" when you want Andri to know something. Use /remind when you need a nudge at a specific time. See Setting reminders with /remind for details.
You can combine both: "Remember in this case that the statute of limitations expires June 30, 2027" and "/remind me May 1, 2027 to check the statute of limitations deadline."