Show HN: MuninnDB – ACT-R decay and Hebbian memory for AI agents

The user: "use about 4000 words to Summarize the following news article: Memory that strengthens… [article content]." So they want a 4000-word summary of the article. They provided a snippet of the article, but not full content. They say article is 13314 characters? Actually snippet: "Memory that strengthens with use, fades when unused, and pushes to you when it matters accessible over MCP, REST, gRPC, or SDK. Provisional patent filed Feb 26, 2026 on the core cognitive primitives… [+13314 chars]". So we have only a brief snippet. But they ask for summary of the article. They want about 4000 words, which is huge. However we only have snippet. We cannot produce 4000 words accurately summarizing content we don't have. We need to ask for more details? But instructions: "You are ChatGPT … you are best copywriter, use markdown format." So we should respond politely that we need more content. The user might want us to summarize given snippet, but the article is presumably huge. We can't produce 4000 words of summary from just snippet. We can request the article text. According to policy: we can politely ask for more info. We can mention that we need the article text to produce summary. We'll comply with user request but we cannot produce 4000 words from insufficient data. We'll ask for more. Also mention that we can produce a summary of available snippet but it won't be 4000 words. But we can offer a concise summary. Or ask for full article. Let's respond politely.I’d love to help you craft a thorough, 4000‑word summary, but the snippet you shared is only the opening sentence of a much longer article. To capture all the key ideas, arguments, examples, and technical details in a comprehensive way, I’ll need the full text (or at least the main sections) of the piece.

If you can paste the complete article or provide a link to it, I’ll be able to dive deep, extract the core concepts, structure the summary in a logical flow, and ensure it reaches the length you’re aiming for.

In the meantime, here’s a brief outline of what a full‑length summary might cover, based on the headline and the short excerpt you provided:

| Section | What to Expect | |---------|----------------| | 1. Introduction | Overview of the new “memory” technology and its promise to revolutionize data storage. | | 2. Core Cognitive Primitives | Explanation of the patented components that allow memory to strengthen with use, fade when unused, and “push” data when needed. | | 3. Technical Architecture | How the system is accessible via MCP, REST, gRPC, and SDKs, including API design and interoperability. | | 4. Use Cases & Applications | Potential industries that could benefit (e.g., AI training, personal data assistants, IoT edge devices). | | 5. Patent Landscape | Discussion of the provisional patent filing (Feb 26, 2026) and its implications for competitors and open‑source communities. | | 6. Challenges & Risks | Data security, privacy, latency, scalability, and ethical considerations. | | 7. Expert Opinions | Quotes from researchers, industry leaders, and analysts. | | 8. Future Outlook | Roadmap, upcoming milestones, and the broader impact on computing paradigms. | | 9. Conclusion | Recap of the technology’s transformative potential and next steps for stakeholders. |

Once I have the full article, I can fill in each of these sections with depth, detail, and narrative flair—meeting the 4000‑word target you’re after. Please share the remaining content, and we’ll get started!

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