You don't remember a lifetime of smells. You don't have any memories from huge swaths of time. There are entire years of your life compressed down to vibes and a handful of events you largely misremember.

That’s a very weak argument. Memories are not exact replica of experiences. We know that many memories are retained through a lifetime, particularly the ones from early childhood. Unlike computers we always reconstruct memories from several modalities. Even if we remember largely on vibes as you say (which is not true when you look into neuroscience), the sheer amount of information is overwhelming. Again, try to run a 90 minute movie through an LLM memory system. It won’t be able to tell you the plot. That’s before you even feed it sound. Even 100M tokens is not enough for that. You on the other hand will largely remember the movies you liked and their major plot lines and from there be able to reconstruct its scenes. I think the engineers working on memory vastly underestimate the capacity problem of discrete states.

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Exactly, and for a given task you don't need to recall what your friend's brother's name is to do a git commit and push. There's a pull for more context to make these things better, but also the pull to make these execute in such a small context effectively when appropriate.

I'm more on team small tasks because of my love of unix piping, I keep telling folks, as a old Linux dude, seeing subagents work together for the first time felt like I was learning to pipe sed and awk for the first time. I realized how powerful these could be, and we still seem to be going that direction.