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Saving in Memory During Dictation

Lohith R avatar
Written by Lohith R
Updated over 3 weeks ago

Sometimes Ve will suggest saving something in memory.

This happens when Ve detects a preference that appears repeatedly and could apply again in the future.


What “save in memory” means

Saving in mind allows Ve to reuse:

  • Tone preferences

  • Structural preferences

  • Communication boundaries

These become defaults, not rules.

They guide future dictation without locking you in.


What should be saved

Good examples:

  • “Keep things concise”

  • “Prefer direct language”

  • “Avoid committing to timelines early”

  • “Use a friendly but firm tone”

These are stable preferences that apply across situations.


What should not be saved

Avoid saving:

  • One-off situations

  • Temporary context

  • Emotional states

  • Highly specific instructions

If it shouldn’t apply again, don’t save it.


Save in memory
Save preferences that should repeat.
Skip anything situational.


Final orientation

Dictation in Ve exists to let you think out loud without paying the cost of writing.

You speak in intent.
Ve prepares structure.
You review and decide.

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