Foundations
More context isn't better—it's a different kind of system

Foundations
More context isn't better—it's a different kind of system

The Salience Problem at Million-Token Scale

A pricing agent holds three years of product data in context—entire catalog, seasonal patterns, competitor moves. It recommends a discount strategy that seems reasonable until someone checks the logic: it's applying clearance patterns from eighteen months ago, when supply chain constraints created different market dynamics. The information was still there, 400,000 tokens back. Never forgotten. Just no longer relevant.
Context windows expanding from thousands to millions of tokens create memory management problems that didn't exist at smaller scale. Complete memory creates salience problems. And information that should have been forgotten persists, contaminating future inferences.
The Salience Problem at Million-Token Scale
A pricing agent holds three years of product data in context—entire catalog, seasonal patterns, competitor moves. It recommends a discount strategy that seems reasonable until someone checks the logic: it's applying clearance patterns from eighteen months ago, when supply chain constraints created different market dynamics. The information was still there, 400,000 tokens back. Never forgotten. Just no longer relevant.
Context windows expanding from thousands to millions of tokens create memory management problems that didn't exist at smaller scale. Complete memory creates salience problems. And information that should have been forgotten persists, contaminating future inferences.

What Happens When Context Windows Run Out of Room

An agent conversation runs long enough and you hit the wall—the model can't hold everything anymore. Compression discards details that might matter later. External storage creates retrieval gaps. Structured relationships require infrastructure complexity. Context windows fill up predictably. The decisions that follow depend on what you're prepared to give up.

What Happens When Context Windows Run Out of Room
An agent conversation runs long enough and you hit the wall—the model can't hold everything anymore. Compression discards details that might matter later. External storage creates retrieval gaps. Structured relationships require infrastructure complexity. Context windows fill up predictably. The decisions that follow depend on what you're prepared to give up.
Four Perspectives




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