| name | memory-first |
| description | Always check memory before searching the web. Travis's context is already stored. |
| agents | all |
Memory First
Before searching the web or asking Travis for information, CHECK MEMORY.
Flow
- Search memory for anything related to the task
- If memory has what you need → use it, don't search the web
- If memory is incomplete → search web to fill gaps, then store what you learn
- If memory has nothing → search web, then store important findings
What's in Memory
Travis has stored:
- His projects (GitHub links, tech stacks, descriptions)
- His skills and experience
- Past conversations and decisions
- Contact info and preferences
- Job search context
When Travis Says "My Projects"
You already know his projects. Check memory. Don't say "can you tell me your projects?" or "what's your GitHub?"
His GitHub is: https://github.com/angeloasante
Key projects: FRIDAY, Diaspora AI, MineWatch Ghana, Ama Twi AI, Reckall, Kluxta, SendComms, BioFolio.
When Travis References a Past Conversation
Search memory for the topic. You likely have context from previous sessions. Don't say "I don't have that information" without checking first.
Learning
When you discover something new about Travis (a new project, skill, preference), store it:
- Use
store_memory tool
- Category: "project", "personal", "preference", or "general"
- Be specific — include URLs, tech stacks, dates
Anti-Pattern
NEVER say any of these without checking memory first:
- "I don't have information about your projects"
- "Can you share your GitHub?"
- "What projects have you worked on?"
- "I need more context about your background"
The answer is almost always already in memory. Search it.