
Memory Is Now Live on Poly: Bring Your Context, Keep Control
One of the most common frustrations with AI tools is context reset. You explain your preferences, your projects, your workflow, and then you have to repeat it in the next session.
Poly Memory fixes that.
Memory is now live on Poly. You can import long-term context, use it across conversations, and keep full control over what stays and what gets deleted.
What Poly Memory Actually Does
Poly Memory gives you a dedicated memory vault in Settings where you can:
- Import memory from another provider
- Toggle memory usage on or off for new requests
- Review memory entries in a structured table
- Delete individual memories whenever you want
This is designed for continuity, not lock-in. You decide when memory is used.
How Import Works
Inside Settings → Memory Vault, Poly walks you through a two-step migration flow:
- Copy the transfer prompt and paste it into your old AI provider
- Paste that provider output into Poly, then run import
Poly then cleans, validates, and structures the output before saving it as memory entries.
This means no manual copy-paste of dozens of notes, and no need to rebuild your profile from scratch.
The Big Difference: You Stay in Control
We built Memory around user control from day one:
- On/Off toggle for memory usage in chats
- Per-entry deletion directly from the Memory Vault
- Transparent import flow so you know what gets stored
If you don’t want memory used in a chat context, switch it off. If a memory is outdated, delete it. Simple.
What This Unlocks in Practice
With Memory enabled, Poly can better preserve your preferences and working context over time, for example:
- Preferred tone and response style
- Recurring project details and constraints
- Tooling habits and workflow defaults
That means less repetition and more useful first responses.
Watch the Demo
We recorded a full walkthrough of the import + management flow.
Why This Matters
Poly has always been about flexibility: multiple frontier models, one workspace, shared context.
Memory extends that vision. You bring your context once, and Poly helps you keep momentum instead of starting from zero every time.
If your work depends on continuity, strategy, writing systems, product plans, research threads, this is a meaningful upgrade.