Listen with your Eyes #auralis
by•
We're Lusungu Luhana and Alinaswe Sinkala.
We're 15 years old. We live in Zambia. And we built a camera that writes poetry.
What is Auralis?
Point it at anything — a window, a face, an empty room, a street at dusk. It watches the light. It reads the colors — warm or cool, bright or shadowed. Then it writes a short, atmospheric story. And it generates a piece of ambient music to match — tempo, key, texture all born from the image.
No filters. No editing. No "perfect shot."
Just a moment. And what the moment felt like.
Why we built it
We noticed that most cameras just take. They capture light and lock it away in folders no one ever opens again.
We wanted a camera that gives something back.
A story. A feeling. A reason to look twice.
How it works
· Open the link. Grant camera access. That's it. No install. No app store.
· Point at anything. Tap "Aurize."
· Auralis analyzes the frame — warmth, contrast, brightness, saturation — and writes a unique story.
· It also generates an ambient beat: title, BPM, key, duration.
· Save moments to your private gallery.
· Talk to AXIS, the AI companion inside Auralis. It remembers your last scene. It reflects. It wonders with you.
· Everything is local. No uploads. No tracking. We don't see your images. They stay on your device.
Who we are
We're two friends from Lusaka, Zambia. We taught ourselves to code. We share a laptop. We build late at night.
Last year, we co-founded Oriole — our small studio.
Auralis is our first public project.
Why we're posting here
We've watched Product Hunt for years. We never thought we'd be on it.
But someone told us to stop waiting and just ship.
So here it is.
We're nervous. We're excited. We hope you find something beautiful in it.
Try it here: auralis.rf.gd
What's next
· Live mode — real-time narration
· Acoustic listening — the room's reverb shapes the story
· A "Last Phone" mode — completely offline. No cloud. No one else will ever hear it.
We're 15. We have time. And we're just getting started.
Thank you for looking at what we made. Lusungu and Alinaswe
Oriole Studio, Lusaka, Zambia

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