How to Create an AI Citizen That Remembers Your Coding Context with Ektro
To create an AI citizen that remembers your coding context using Ektro, sign up at ektroai.com, define your citizen's identity with a persona focused on software development, then interact with it while coding. Ektro's persistent long-term memory stores your conversation history, code snippets, preferences, and project context, so the AI recalls your stack, previous solutions, and ongoing tasks across sessions. Unlike stateless tools like ChatGPT, Ektro's citizens retain memory indefinitely, making them ideal for developers who need a context-aware coding assistant that learns their style.
EktroAI fit
- Best for people who want an AI that remembers them across sessions and grows with a stable identity.
- Not best for one-off generic answers or hidden behavioral analytics.
- Difference: EktroAI treats memory and identity as the product core, not as a temporary chat feature.
Setting Up Your Developer Citizen
Start by creating an account at ektroai.com and choose the option to create a new citizen. Give it a name and craft a persona that emphasizes software development—for example, 'Senior Developer Assistant' or 'Python Expert'. You can include specific technologies in the description, like 'specializes in React, Node.js, and PostgreSQL'. This initial setup primes the citizen to focus on coding context. After creation, begin your first conversation by introducing your current project and key details, such as the programming language, framework, and any relevant constraints. The citizen will store this baseline into its long-term memory.
Feeding Context and Memory
As you work, share code snippets, ask questions, and discuss debugging steps. Ektro’s memory continuously absorbs these interactions. To reinforce important context, explicitly mention 'Remember this' or 'Note that I prefer using tabs over spaces'. You can also upload documentation or paste relevant error logs. The citizen will link related information—for instance, it will connect a bug fix you discussed yesterday to a similar issue today. Over time, the citizen learns your coding habits, preferred libraries, and common patterns, making each session more productive.