We wait too long to record the people we love. The voicemails get deleted, the photos blur, the stories nobody wrote down quietly disappear. Sit with your grandmother this Sunday. The way to keep them close exists now — use it before you wish you had.
Three quiet steps
Not a tool. A likeness, made for one person.
Most of what people call AI is one model, trained once, serving everyone the same. A smarika is the opposite. It’s built and tuned around a single person — by people who treat getting them right as the whole job.
Each smarika is trained from the ground up on only your loved one — never blended with strangers, never reused for anyone else.
We don't settle for a generic likeness. Each one is reviewed and refined — the set of their smile, the light in their eyes — until it's unmistakably them.
The capture plan is shaped around who they are — their age, what they're at ease with, the outfits that are truly theirs — so the source is right before training begins.
Their model lives in your account alone. It is never pooled into ours, and never used to improve anything else.
Consent first, always
A smarika is only ever created with the explicit consent of the person being preserved. They own it, and they can ask to destroy it at any time. We will not help create one of someone who hasn't agreed.
Private by default
Their photos, voice, and trained memory stay in your account. We don't use any of it to train our own models. You can export everything, or delete it completely, whenever you choose.
What a preserved smarika can hold
Honest examples — chosen for warmth, not novelty. Every output is tagged as preserved.
“तू जेवलास का?”
“Have you eaten?” — the first thing she always asked