By the numbers
Where your stories happen
Setting is one of the most important signals Memorygram learns from. It's how the model understands that a story told over Sunday dinner travels differently than one told in a hospital room.
No settings logged yet. As you capture stories, tell us where they were told — kitchen table, porch, around a fire — and they'll show up here.
Most-storied people
Whose voice shows up most in your vault. Memorygram uses these patterns to learn whose memory a family chooses to keep alive.
The chain of memory
Every story you tag with "who told you this" and "who do you want to pass it to" becomes one link in a chain. Here's the chain your family is building.
No chains logged yet. The next time you capture a story, name who told it to you and who you want to pass it to.
What your family contributes to Memorygram is anonymized in aggregate. We never share names, photos, or specific stories with other families. We do share patterns: that 73% of memories happen at a kitchen table, that immigration shows up most often in stories about food, that grandmothers are remembered more than grandfathers — and we do it so the model gets better at honoring memory, especially for families whose history was nearly lost.