
The Teen Building AI’s Long-Term Memory
When Dhravya Shah left Mumbai for Arizona, he carried a laptop,a dream, and a habit of building something new every week. One of those late-night experiments — a tool that let people chat with their Twitter bookmarks — would quietly evolve into Supermemory,a technology now reshaping how AI remembers. At just nineteen, Shah isn’t chasing viral chatbots or flashy AI tools. He’s focused on something deeper: teaching machines to hold onto context the way humans do. His platform, Supermemory, extracts meaning from unstructured data — files, emails, videos — and weaves it into a knowledge graph that lets AI recall details long after a conversation ends. What began as a college side project caught the attention of Cloudflare’s CTO and investors from Google, OpenAI, and Susa Ventures, who backed Shah with $2.6 million to build the next layer of AI infrastructure. Today, startups like Cluely, Montra, and Rube are already using Supermemory to give their apps continuity and depth. Shah’s story isn’t just about code — it’s about curiosity, persistence, and the idea that intelligence isn’t truly intelligent until it remembers where it’s been. 🚀 Stay ahead of Arizona’s innovation frontier.
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