Host A: Imagine pouring hours into solving a coding issue only to face it again weeks later, and your AI assistant can't help because it doesn't remember. That's the stark reality many developers face, known as AI amnesia. It's frustrating and costly. Host B: Absolutely! The idea of having to rediscover solutions is not just about time; it's about losing the momentum you built while solving those problems. It can be a massive productivity drain. Host A: Exactly! But there's a new solution on the horizon—the project-memory skill for Claude Code. It's designed to retain project-specific context, meaning your assistant can remember decisions and configurations across sessions. Host B: That sounds revolutionary. So instead of starting from scratch every time, developers can leverage this memory and cut down on repetitive work? What are its real-world implications? Host A: Right. By retaining context, developers can save significant hours. It's estimated that time wasted on rediscovering solutions can cost around $2,600 per developer annually. That's money well saved! Host B: Wow, that’s eye-opening! Can you give me an example of how this would play out in a coding scenario? Sure! Let's say you face a CORS error. Normally, you might spend hours looking up the same proxy configurations. With project-memory, you just ask Claude, and it recalls how you fixed it last time, streamlining the process. So it's like having a built-in knowledge database that grows as you work. What about creating these skills? How accessible is that? It's quite straightforw