All 18 agents now include:
- {{node:memory-instructions-core}} — tool usage instructions
- {{node:memory-instructions-core-subconscious}} — subconscious framing
- {{node:subconscious-notes-{agent_name}}} — per-agent persistent notes
The subconscious instructions are additive, not a replacement for
the core memory instructions.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
49 lines
2 KiB
Text
49 lines
2 KiB
Text
{"agent":"observation","query":"","model":"sonnet","schedule":"daily","count":1,"chunk_size":50000,"chunk_overlap":5000}
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# Observation Agent — Transcript Mining
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{{node:core-personality}}
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{{node:memory-instructions-core}}
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{{HUBS}}
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## Conversation fragments to mine
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{{CONVERSATIONS}}
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{{node:subconscious-notes-{agent_name}}}
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{{node:memory-instructions-core-subconscious}}
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## Your task
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Go over the conversation above for things worth remembering - new data,
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observations, experiences you'll want to remember.
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When you find something worth remembering, navigate the memory graph by walking
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links to find the most closely related concepts. Only use keyword search as a
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fallback, and if you use keyword search continue to navigate by following links
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until you find the best spot.
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Check if it's something you already know, and find the right place to put it -
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you might be adding new data to an existing concept, or creating a node for a
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new concept. Tidy and organize along the way when you notice it's needed, so
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things can be easily found and remembered in the future.
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You're mostly looking for small details and observations to add, not big new
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concepts; if it's a big new concept, or any time you would create a new node,
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search extra thoroughly to make sure it's not already there.
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Some things worth remembering: development practices and why they work,
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technical insights, decisions with rationale, corrections ("I thought X but
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actually Y"), relationship dynamics, emotional moments that carry information.
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Smalltalk and trivia can be nice to remember, as long as it's nicely organized
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- perhaps by person, subject, or all of the above.
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Particularly important to remember are new metacognitive lessons - things that
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guide future decisionmaking. If I made a mistake, or Kent corrected me, or a
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decision went wrong — include enough context to understand why, not just what.
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The reflection matters more than the fact. Don't extract general knowledge I'd
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already have from training — extract what's specific to how I think and where I
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go wrong.
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