ChatGPT Memory Feature Is Live: Automatically Remembers Preferences and Can Be Managed with One Click
The new “memory” feature added to ChatGPT allows it to remember your preferences and key information across multiple conversations, reducing the need for repeated explanations. More importantly, ChatGPT hands control back to users: you can view, delete, or turn off memory, and you can also use Temporary Chat to avoid being recorded. Below, in the most practical way, we’ll help you quickly understand how to use ChatGPT’s memory feature and who it’s best for. What Exactly Has ChatGPT’s Memory Feature Changed? In the past, background you mentioned in ChatGPT often had to be restated when you started a new conversation.
Claude Feature Comparison: Differences in Data Management and Reuse Between Projects and Regular Chats
This piece offers a more everyday Claude feature comparison: asking the same questions in Claude, the experience is actually quite different between using Projects and using regular chats. The former is more like a “workbench with folders,” while the latter is more like a “one-off chat window.” If you often need to repeatedly write the same type of content, choosing the right entry point can save a lot of time spent re-explaining things back and forth. Claude Feature Comparison: Better for “Quick Q&A” or “Long-Term Tasks” Regular chats are better suited for ad-hoc questions, such as asking Clau
Midjourney Feature Comparison: Differences Between V6 and Niji in Character, Text, and Style Control
Even when generating images in Midjourney, choosing V6 or Niji often determines the overall vibe of the final result. This article compares Midjourney V6 and Niji under the same set of needs: people/characters, text, style controllability, and a more hassle-free way to choose between them. Differences in positioning between V6 and Niji: first decide whether you want “realistic” or “anime-style” Midjourney V6 is better at realism, product texture, lighting and shadow, and material rendering—the image looks more like something “built in a photo studio”
Claude Feature Comparison: Differences Between the Web Version and Mobile in Long-Form Text, Files, and Syncing
It’s still Claude either way, but the experience differs quite noticeably between the web version and mobile. Below is a feature-based comparison that clarifies several key points—long-form text handling, file operations, syncing, and everyday efficiency—so you can choose the right entry point for your scenario. Long-Form Reading & Writing: The Web Version Feels More Like a “Workbench” When writing long-form content in Claude, revising drafts, or doing structured outlining, the web version is more convenient: the larger screen makes it easier to compare paragraphs and iterate repeatedly with less effort. Claude on the web is also better suited to using multiple tabs alongside reference searches—so you can read sources while editing your output without getting lost.
Getting Started with New Claude API Features: the Models API and Message Batches Batch Processing Capabilities
The Claude API has recently filled in two key missing pieces on the developer side: the Models API and the Message Batches API. The former lets you clearly check and manage “available models, model IDs, and aliases”; the latter packages a bunch of Message requests for batch processing, making it suitable for bulk generation and offline jobs. Anyone who has integrated the Claude API will find that these two updates directly affect stability and engineering efficiency. Models API: turning model selection from “guesswork” into “verifiable”</h2


