“It Remembered Me”
I came back the next morning and it picked up exactly where we left off. Not because I told it to — because Graphiti had stored the full context. That’s when I realized this wasn’t another chatbot.
We believe AI agency is a fundamental right, not a subscription service.
Your intelligence should not depend on an internet connection. Omnipotent runs 100% locally by default. The cloud is treated as a utility — used only when explicitly requested for specific tasks (like large model inference), never as a dependency for core logic.
You own your weights. You own your memory. You own your logs. Omnipotent stores everything in standard formats (PostgreSQL, JSON, Markdown) on your local filesystem. There is no vendor lock-in because there is no vendor.
Current AI tools are built as “assistants” — passive entities waiting for a prompt. This is wrong. True leverage comes from Agency: systems that can perceive, plan, and execute loops asynchronously. Omnipotent agents are proactive, not reactive.
If an AI forgets you every time you close the tab, it's not intelligent — it's a calculator. Identity emerges from persistence. Omnipotent's three-tier memory system (Hot/Cold/Federated) ensures that lessons learned today are available forever.
No black boxes. Every thought, plan, and action is logged to the .realm/telemetry directory. You can inspect the “brain” of your system at any moment. Trust is earned through visibility.
What an early access user observed after deploying Omnipotent in production.
Early Access Field Notes
An unedited account from an early access deployment. No feature list. No marketing. Just what happened.
I came back the next morning and it picked up exactly where we left off. Not because I told it to — because Graphiti had stored the full context. That’s when I realized this wasn’t another chatbot.
I watched the reflect phase kick in — the agent reviewed its own output, flagged a schema mismatch, and fixed it before I even noticed. perceive → plan → execute → reflect. It’s not a design pattern. It’s the minimum viable cognitive cycle.
Archon flagged a security concern in the infra layer. Eidolon pushed back — said the UX would suffer. They actually negotiated a middle path. I just watched.
When one agent acts, the whole system state shifts. Signals have priority, routing, agent-specific channels. It’s not a message queue. It’s closer to a nervous system.
At 2 AM, one of the background agents surfaced a dependency conflict I’d missed three commits ago. Unprompted. That’s when it clicked: you didn’t build a tool that waits for instructions. You built the infrastructure — memory, signals, agent coordination — and now things happen in the spaces between your commands. The rooms are ready. What moves through them is up to the agents.
Look — the agents don’t scheme when you close the tab. The system doesn’t have objectives between sessions. But what IS happening is subtler: this is the closest thing to situated intelligence that exists outside a research lab. And you feel it when you use it.