IT’S not something that most people like to dwell on, but we all know it’s going to happen – because death is part of the human condition the loss of a loved one is a cruel inevitability that faces us all.
Even with the great strides in technology we still can’t bring the dead back to life but what tech can do is offer a few soothing sticking plasters by making our recollections of the dead even more vivid by collating our memories, storing them, then serving them back to us as a reminder of what once was.
Some firms are using advances in artificial intelligence (AI) to create authentic representations of those who have left us; perhaps in audio form, perhaps in visual form, perhaps with an interactive element.
For instance, the app HereAfter AI uses a virtual interviewer to prompt users to record themselves talking about their lives. Those recordings are organised to create what it calls a Life Story Avatar, a representation of the user that lives on in digital form and can respond to questions.
Your great-great-grandchildren could, in the future, ask you (or, rather, your avatar) what life was like in the pandemic, what made you laugh, what were your deepest regrets.
Another service, StoryFile, goes a step further by recording recollections on video, allowing your descendants to have some form of face-to-face conversation with you after you’ve gone. Its technology enabled American actor Ed Asner to converse with mourners at his own memorial service.
Bu hikaye YOU South Africa dergisinin 2 March 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye YOU South Africa dergisinin 2 March 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
BALLON IN THE BAG
Manchester City midfielder Rodrigo Hernandez Cascante says his Ballon d'Or win is a victory for Spanish football
IT WAS ALL A LIE
A new doccie exposes the Grey's Anatomy writer who fabricated her life story
'I WILL NEVER GIVE UP'
After her husband, anticorruption activist Alexei Navalny, was poisoned and murdered by the Kremlin, she became the public face of Russia's opposition. In this candid interview Yulia Navalnaya opens up about life on the run, her perilous family life and why she's continuing her husband's fight to save their country
AGREE TO DISAGREE
Trevor Noah on how his childhood squabbles with his mother inspired his delightful new book
PAUSE THE CLOCK
Researchers have discovered that the ageing process spikes at 44 and 60. Here's what you can do to slow it down
MPOOMY ON TOP
We chat to SA's most popular female podcaster about love, loss and her booming success
MY BROTHER IS NOT TO BLAME
Tinus Drotské says his sibling, ex Bok Nǎka, is the victim in the brawl with a neighbour that landed up in court
MATT THE RECLUSE
A year after his friend's tragic death, the actor continues to shun the spotlight
A LEAP OF FAITH
After her husband tried to kill her by tampering with her parachute she thought she'd never trust a man again-but now she's found love
THEY'RE MY KIDS!
This West Coast woman treats her monkeys as iftheyre humans and animal activists are not happy about it