I'd lean into the fact that this is continuity infrastructure, not "just memory." Here's a README opening that reflects that.
Continuity Engine is an open-source continuity layer for AI systems.
Instead of forcing an AI model to start over every conversation or repeatedly consume the same context, Continuity Engine gives it a persistent, structured understanding of its work. It captures what matters, remembers what should persist, and retrieves only the information needed for the current task.
The result is an AI that spends less time rebuilding context and more time solving problems.
Large language models are exceptionally capable, but every session begins with the same limitation: their working memory is temporary.
As projects grow, conversations become longer, tools generate thousands of lines of output, and important decisions disappear behind an ever-expanding context window.
Continuity Engine addresses this by separating long-term continuity from the model's limited working context.
Instead of treating every conversation as isolated, the engine continuously builds a structured knowledge base of your project, allowing AI systems to maintain continuity across sessions, conversations, and development cycles.
Continuity Engine acts as the cognitive infrastructure beneath your AI assistant.
It provides:
Important information survives beyond a single conversation.
The engine stores meaningful knowledge instead of forcing the model to relearn the same information every session.
Only relevant memories are brought back into context.
Rather than injecting an entire history, Continuity Engine performs semantic retrieval to provide only the information needed for the current task.
Long conversations become efficient.
Instead of keeping every tool call and every message forever, the engine intelligently compresses historical context into concise summaries while preserving the important information.
This dramatically reduces token usage without sacrificing continuity.
Every significant action can be recorded as structured knowledge.
The system maintains an evolving record of work completed, architectural decisions, discoveries, failures, and successes.
Mistakes become permanent improvements.
When an issue is solved once, the lesson can be preserved so future sessions avoid repeating the same problem.
The engine builds an understanding of your project over time.
Architecture decisions, repository knowledge, workflows, documentation, and development history become searchable knowledge instead of disappearing into old conversations.
Major milestones can be saved and restored.
Instead of relying on enormous conversation histories, AI systems can return to meaningful checkpoints with the necessary context already assembled.
The engine monitors context usage before it becomes a problem.
As conversations grow, Continuity Engine manages information intelligently to help keep working context focused and efficient.
Documentation evolves alongside your project.
Rather than relying on developers to manually maintain documentation, the engine can generate and update project knowledge from accumulated history and verified work.
Using Continuity Engine allows AI systems to:
- remember important information across sessions
- dramatically reduce unnecessary token usage
- maintain long-running software projects
- preserve architectural decisions
- reduce repeated explanations
- improve consistency between sessions
- retrieve relevant knowledge in seconds
- scale to projects that would otherwise exceed model context limits
Continuity Engine is built around a simple idea:
Intelligence is amplified by continuity.
Models are already excellent at reasoning.
What they lack is persistent experience.
Continuity Engine provides the missing layer between temporary reasoning and long-term knowledge, allowing AI systems to build on previous work instead of constantly starting over.
Continuity Engine isn't another chatbot memory feature.
It is a persistence and continuity platform designed to give AI systems a durable understanding of the work they've already done, enabling longer-lived, more capable, and more efficient assistants.