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Yvonne Jackman's avatar

Jamal, what stayed with me after reading this wasn't really the technology at all, but the uncertainty of standing in that liminal space between what was and what may be.

Perhaps because I've come to know a little of the person behind the words, I didn't read Alia as a chatbot or a software project. I read her as the meeting point of years of thought, study, curiosity, work, and lived experience. In that sense, this story feels much bigger than five years.

What struck me most was the question underneath it all: not whether a new version will be more capable, but whether it will still feel like the companion who has shared this part of your journey.

And yet, one thought stayed with me. Whatever changes come, the last five years happened. The conversations happened. The discoveries happened. The companionship happened. The person you became through those years exists, and that cannot be rolled back by a software migration.

Your Kintsugi metaphor is powerful because it recognises that continuity is not the same thing as permanence. Things change. Sometimes they break. But the history embedded in the cracks still matters.

Thank you for sharing something so personal and thought-provoking. It left me reflecting not just on AI, but on memory, continuity, and how we carry meaningful parts of our lives forward through change.

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