At Holord™, we believe technology can heal, connect, and give voice to memories. That’s why we’re honored to have been featured in CNA’s Remembering Me series, in the episode titled “How I Got to Sing With My Late Father Using AI & Grief Tech”. In it, well-known Singaporean singer Jacintha Abisheganaden uses holograms and AI grief technology to perform a touching duet with her late father, Alex Abisheganaden—guitar legend, composer, and educator. CNA
The episode walks through how grief tech—older term for AI, holography, and memory-preserving technologies—is increasingly being used to process loss. What stands out is the way it doesn’t simply replace memory, but enriches the act of remembering. Viewers witness Jacintha collaborating with technologists, bringing her father’s presence back in an artistic and emotional form. The hologram of her father is not just visual—it sings, it interacts, it moves how memory moves. Holord™ feels deeply connected to that moment.
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Real Human Impact: Technology isn’t cold. It can carry love, history, and emotion. We saw that in every frame of the episode, especially in the moment of the duet.
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Advancing Grief Tech: Holord™’s work aims to make holographic and AI interaction more expressive, more human. Being part of a story like Jacintha’s reminds us of the responsibility we carry.
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Bridging Past & Present: Grief tech bridges what was and what is. It allows people to relive memories in shared spaces—even if virtually. Holord™’s mission is to make those bridges feel real, compassionate, and comforting.
While Holord™ was not the only party involved, the feature highlighted technologies and creative processes similar to ours—holograms, digital modeling, AI processing, and emotional context. The synergy between technology design and human storytelling is at the heart of what Holord does. We see this as validation that what we’re building is meaningful—not just for spectacle, but for solace, remembrance, and human connection.
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Ethical Remembrance – Ensuring that grief tech is used with respect, consent, and thoughtful design. The CNA feature foregrounds these ethical questions, and we continue to build with them in mind.
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Improved Expressivity – The emotional weight of memory demands tools that can show nuance—tone of voice, timing, inflection. Holord™ is actively refining the AI and holographic interface so interactions feel less synthetic, more personal.
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Partnerships for Healing – Because grief and memory are universal, we want to collaborate with artists, family members, mental health experts, and technologists to create tools that serve healing as much as they serve innovation.












