You open a new conversation and it's a blank slate — again. Who you are, what you're building, the decisions you already made, the way you like things done: gone. So you spend the first ten minutes catching the AI up on what it should already know. There's a version where it just remembers.
A normal chat assistant keeps what you say only for the length of that one conversation. Start a new one and it begins from nothing, because the memory was never really yours to keep — it lived on someone else's server, tied to a single thread. The result is a tool with no long-term sense of you, no matter how many times you've worked together.
Wetlether runs against a box in your own cloud, and that box holds your history. So the assistant carries things forward: your projects, your wording, the decisions you've already settled, the shape of what you're building. Pick up a thread from last week — or from your phone instead of your laptop — and it's all still there.
No more re-briefing. You start where you left off, not from scratch.
It follows you between devices. Begin on your laptop, continue on your phone — same memory, same context.
It gets more useful over time, because the history it's drawing on is the real record of your work, not a fresh blank each time.
Wetlether — an AI that remembers you, on a box you own. Free to start.