I think memory features in LLMs are brilliant. They help these systems understand me better and tailor responses to my preferences. That's genuinely useful.

But here's what I've noticed: my needs change constantly. I'm human, and my circumstances aren't the same from one day to the next.

Let me give you an example. On a Saturday morning, I'm sitting with my coffee, and I want a detailed 2500-word exploration of a topic. I have the time, and I'm in the mood for it. But come Monday, when I'm preparing for a presentation or cramming before a meeting, I need a quick 250-word summary. Yet the LLM, remembering my Saturday preference, still gives me that lengthy response.

So now I'm manually asking it to shorten the answer. After a few back-and-forth prompts, I finally get what I need. It works, but honestly, it's frustrating and eats up time I don't have.

This got me thinking—what if there was a simpler solution? Imagine having a response length selector right in the interface. Before I hit send, I could choose: Short (150 words), Medium (600 words), or Long (3000 words). One simple click, and I get exactly what I need without the iterations.

Think about it—we already have similar controls everywhere. Font size adjusters, reading mode toggles, playback speed controls. These are proven UX patterns that respect user agency and adapt to our needs in the moment. Why shouldn't AI interfaces work the same way?

Beyond just convenience, this would reduce the mental effort of rephrasing requests and keep me in my flow when I'm working. It's also more accessible—not everyone finds it easy to articulate "make it shorter" or "give me more detail." A visual toggle removes that barrier entirely.

It's a small UX tweak that could save users a lot of hassle. Sometimes the best improvements aren't about making AI smarter—they're about making the experience work better for how we actually live and work.

Key Takeaways:

  1. LLM memories are valuable, but human needs shift with context—what works on Saturday doesn't work on Monday.
  2. A response length selector (Short/Medium/Long) could eliminate frustrating back-and-forth iterations and save time.
  3. Simple UX controls reduce cognitive load, improve accessibility, and mirror proven patterns we already use daily.