Choosing and Combining Cognitive Chips for Different Tasks
How to pick a Cognitive Chip for the job, switch modes without rewriting Identity, and combine MemoryCode with QuickCopy or MCP across tools.
Read article →Guides and insights on AI memory, cognitive chips, and MCP integration.
How to pick a Cognitive Chip for the job, switch modes without rewriting Identity, and combine MemoryCode with QuickCopy or MCP across tools.
Read article →MemoryCode keeps identity and cognitive chips in your browser. Understand what leaves your machine when you use MCP, QuickCopy, and Claude — and how local-first boundaries compare to cloud memory.
Read article →How developers use MemoryCode for consistent Identity and Cognitive Chips across Cursor, Windsurf, Claude Desktop, and local models — with MCP or QuickCopy.
Read article →Compare static system prompts with MemoryCode’s Identity + Cognitive Chip model — portability, switching behavior, MCP, and when to use both.
Read article →Most people use more than one AI tool. Here's how MemoryCode keeps your identity and context consistent across Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf, and any tool that accepts a system prompt.
Read article →MemoryCode offers two ways to deliver your context to AI tools: QuickCopy and MCP Connect. Here's how they compare, who each one is for, and how to decide.
Read article →Learn how to set up a persistent AI memory for Claude Desktop using MemoryCode's cognitive chips — the new paradigm for making AI truly personal.
Read article →A cognitive chip is a reusable AI behavior preset that changes how Claude or other AI tools think — without rewriting your context every time. Here's how it works.
Read article →A practical guide to useful Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers — from local file access and GitHub to personal AI memory. What they do, who they're for, and how to get started.
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