OraMemo: Technology Safeguards Family Warmth

In his middle years, the founder of OraMemo faced the loss of loved ones, watched his parents grow older, and saw friends struggle with illness and separation. The regret of “wanting to care for your parents but losing them before you get the chance” and the anxiety of “a parent outliving their child” hit close to home—making him realize just how much family health and togetherness can’t wait.
Then in 2024, a long voice message from his mom changed everything. She wrote: “I get winded after just a few steps when I go grocery shopping,” “Your dad keeps forgetting to take his blood pressure meds,” and “I want to talk about old photos, but I don’t want to bother you if you’re busy.” Her simple words, full of unspoken worries and quiet longing, pushed him to act: he decided to use technology to build a “health safety net” for families—and that’s how OraMemo came to be.
Every member of the founding team has over a decade of experience in consumer electronics and AI hardware, and they’ve already tackled tough technical hurdles in health monitoring. Their goal? No cold, impersonal gadgets—instead, a “warm home health management system” that feels like a part of the family.
Take the “Family Memory Bank”: it uses AI to organize voice notes, old memories from parents, and even weaves those moments into health track records. So even if you’re thousands of miles apart, you can still hold onto that family warmth. Then there’s the “in-home senior care companion”—it acts like an invisible guardian, sending smart reminders to take meds, tracking health red flags, and even mimicking a child’s tone to check in on elderly family members living alone. The time machine hardware even comes with a hearing aid feature, making it easier for parents to chat and interact with the family. And in emergencies? You can pull up their location right away.
As the founder put it: “I never want anyone to look back and regret ‘not having enough time’ again.” Today, OraMemo is making its way into more and more homes—turning health into something you can plan for, erasing the distance in companionship, and helping families hold onto warmth, not regrets.