Maple, the privacy-focused AI assistant, shipped three organizational features: projects, shared context, and pinned chats.
Projects let you group related conversations together - useful if you're juggling separate threads for different clients, topics, or work areas. Shared context means you can set background information once (your role, preferences, standing instructions) and have it carry into every chat within that project, rather than re-explaining yourself at the start of each session. Pins give you quick access to specific chats without scrolling through history.
These are the same patterns that Claude's Projects feature, ChatGPT's memory system, and Notion AI have shipped over the past year or two. Maple's pitch is privacy: your conversations aren't used to train models and aren't stored on third-party servers in the way they are with the major consumer AI products. The tradeoff has always been a thinner feature set - today's update closes some of that gap.
Shared context per project is the most practically useful addition here. If you use an AI assistant across multiple clients or roles, having it hold separate context for each one - without manually pasting it in every time - removes the main friction point of privacy-first tools. No pricing changes were announced alongside the update.