Auri is a discreet wearable assistant for people living with Alzheimer's, dementia, or short-term memory loss. It anticipates needs before they become problems — entirely on-device, entirely private.
Auri addresses the distinct challenges that come with short-term memory loss and Alzheimer's — because they are not the same problem.
A task started in the kitchen is forgotten within minutes. With no caregiver present, a lit stove becomes a serious fire hazard.
Walking away mid-task and forgetting entirely — flooding and water damage are common consequences of unsupervised memory lapses.
The act of taking a pill isn't retained. Patients skip doses or double-dose with no way to verify what they've already done.
"Who are you?" "Did I eat?" "Where is my husband?" — repeated dozens of times daily. Caregivers answer each one patiently, every single time, indefinitely.
It's not the physical care that breaks caregivers — it's the relentless emotional weight of being someone's entire memory, every hour of every day.
Patients lose track of who they are, who surrounds them, and where they are — especially in unfamiliar moments. Gentle re-orientation is needed constantly.
Auri works silently in the background — no apps to open, no screens to tap.
Auri takes in three streams simultaneously — audio (what you say and ask), vision (what you see and who is around you), and motion (what you're doing and how your body moves). Everything is processed on the device. Nothing is uploaded.
The on-device AI cross-references all three inputs to build a real-time picture — identifying who is speaking, what they need, whether a task was completed, and whether something is about to go wrong.
When a question is spoken, Auri answers it. When a danger is detected, Auri acts. When a memory gap is sensed, Auri steps in — with a calm voice, a haptic nudge, or a caregiver alert.
Auri hears your questions, sees your surroundings, and reads your movements — yet not a single byte of that leaves the device. All audio, vision, and motion processing happens locally. No cloud. No servers. No company listening to your loved one's most vulnerable moments.
Worn without ever noticing it — that's the goal. Auri is engineered around the patient, not the technology.
Whether it's Alzheimer's disrupting a chain of thought, dementia causing disorientation mid-task, or short-term memory loss making a completed action feel undone — all three share the same signature: a gap between intention and execution. Auri is trained to detect that gap and step in at exactly that moment. It also serves as a patient personal memory — quietly answering repeated questions about family, daily routines, and identity, so caregivers don't have to bear that weight alone.
Detects cooking start, monitors time, nudges if left unattended
Short-Term Memory LossNotices water-task started, prompts if user has moved away
Short-Term Memory LossLearns schedule, confirms intake, alerts caregiver if missed
Short-Term Memory LossFlags if the patient leaves without locking, based on exit routines
Short-Term Memory LossAnswers "Who is this?", "Did I eat?", "Where do I live?" calmly, every time, without tiring
Alzheimer'sGently reminds patients of their name, surroundings, and daily context when disoriented
Alzheimer'sDetects if meals are being skipped and nudges gently
Short-Term Memory LossMonitors activity level and suggests water intake throughout the day
Short-Term Memory LossWe're validating with caregivers and families supporting people with Alzheimer's, dementia, or short-term memory loss. Tell us about your situation — every response shapes what we build.
Your responses directly influence which features we prioritise in the first version.
Waitlist members get exclusive founder pricing when we launch.
We'll reach out to a select group for in-home pilot testing before launch.
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Thank you for your interest. We'll be in touch soon with updates on Auri's progress.