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Blazej Mrozinski

ClaudioBrain

AI Systems · Knowledge Management

Most people use an AI assistant as a stateless tool: every session starts from zero, and you spend the first ten minutes re-explaining who you are, how you work, and what you’re building. ClaudioBrain is my answer to that — a structured, version-controlled knowledge base that an AI reads at the start of every session.

It encodes the things a good colleague accumulates over months: how I make decisions, where the hard boundaries are, the state of each project, and the standards work has to meet. With that context loaded, the assistant behaves less like a search box and more like a CTO who already knows the business — it can pick up a task in any one of a dozen projects without a calibration session.

The point isn’t the AI; it’s the operating system around it. The leverage comes from treating institutional knowledge as a maintained artifact rather than something re-typed into a chat window every day. I’ve written about how this changes the working relationship in How I Taught AI to Work Like a Colleague.