Detailed pricing plans are not available yet for this tool.
Media/PressContactBook a demoSTORYFILEBringing History to Life Through Interactive ConversationStoryFile transforms interviews into AI-powered, life-size conversations for museums and institutions. Visitors ask real questions and receive authentic video responses in real time.Book a demoAt the National WWII Museum, preserving the firsthand memories of those who served is central to our mission, and this experience lets visitors form real connections with that history.— National WWII Museum in New Orleans - "Voices from the Front,"FEATURED INHow StoryFile WorksStoryFile enables institutions to preserve and present firsthand history through interactive conversation. Carefully structured interviews are indexed, allowing visitors to ask questions and receive authentic responses in real time.1Record the interviewA cinematic, professionally filmed session capturing hundreds of thoughtful responses.2AI IndexingStoryFile intelligently links each answer to natural conversational pathways.3Real-time InteractionVisitors ask questions and receive instant, authentic video responses.In The PressHolocaust Museum for Hope & HumanityOrlando, FLRead articleNaval Aviation MuseumPensacola, FLRead articleMuseum of Kansas CityKansas City, MORead articlePremium Hardware PairingHOLOGLASSA beautiful 3D display that brings digital humans to life in the physical world with cinematic fidelity.Learn MoreUnlike generative “ghost” avatars that can fabricate synthetic personas, StoryFile captures real people answering real questions.This technology honors individual voices and brings more emotional integrity and meaning to how people remember and connect with those they’ve lost.— New York Times: “What Happens to Us After We Die—Online?”Preserve a Lifetime of MemoriesCreate a StoryFile for your loved one so family can ask questions today—and for generations to come.Book a demoReady to see StoryFile in action?Schedule a guided walkthrough with our team.Book a demoSTORYFILEStoryFile is an AI-powered video platform that allows users to create and train conversational AI interactions, making AI conversations feel more human.CompanyMedia/PressBook DemoContact UsSOLUTIONSInstitutionsLegaciesLegalPrivacy PolicyTerms of ServiceAI Ethics PolicySub-Processors ListProfessional Service Terms© 2026 StoryFile. All rights reserved. --- Media & PressFeb 3, 2026Preserving Florida Voices — Interactive Holocaust Testimony Comes to OrlandoHolocaust Museum for Hope & HumanityOrlando, FLSep 18, 2025Return with Honor: A Conversation That Carries the Mission ForwardNaval Aviation MuseumPensacola, FLSep 4, 2025StoryFile Technology Powers New Big Sonia Exhibit at the Museum of Kansas CityMuseum of Kansas CityKansas City, MOJun 15, 2025New York Times: What Happens to Us After We Die—Online?New York TimesNew York, NYApr 18, 2025AI meets oral history to preserve military vet experiencesNational Medal of Honor MuseumArlington, TXMay 23, 2024KNBC LA: Japanese American National Museum Uses AI to Preserve Lawson Sakai’s LegacyJapanese American National MuseumLos Angeles, CAApr 4, 2024Smithsonian Magazine: This Museum Lets Visitors Talk to A.I. Copies of World War II VeteransNational World War II MuseumNew Orleans, LAJan 16, 2024Conversa AI Connects Top Retail Execs to NRF 2024National Retail FederationNew York, NYSep 20, 2023BBC News: Meta launches interactive Holocaust education tool using AIMeta & StoryFileNew York, NYMay 8, 2023AI Rising: The New Reality of Artificial LifeAustralian Broadcasting CompanyLos Angeles, CAMar 10, 2023Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed unveils Smart Mission project to improve UAE's consular servicesUAE Ministry of Foreign AffairsAbu Dhabi, United Arab EmiratesNov 17, 2022StoryFile Named CES 2023 Innovation Awards HonoreeCES 2023Las Vegas, NVAug 14, 2022The Telegraph: Grandmother talks to mourners at her own funeralThe TelegraphNottingham, United KingdomApr 22, 2022StoryFile and Healthy Soil Biomes Launch Interactive AI Experience for Earth DayHealthy Soil BiomesLos Angeles, CAApr 20, 2022First AI-Powered ALS Educational Platform Launches for the PublicPaint for the CurePhoenix, AZFeb 9, 2022National Marine Mammal Foundation Debuts AI-powered Dr. Sam Ridgway, the father of marine mammal medicine.National Marine Mammal FoundationSan Diego, CASTORYFILEStoryFile is an AI-powered video platform that allows users to create and train conversational AI interactions, making AI conversations feel more human.CompanyMedia/PressBook DemoContact UsSOLUTIONSInstitutionsLegaciesLegalPrivacy PolicyTerms of ServiceAI Ethics PolicySub-Processors ListProfessional Service Terms© 2026 StoryFile. All rights reserved.Media/PressContactBook a demo --- Contact UsWe'd love to hear from you. Please fill out this form, and we'll reply soon.For media/press inquiries, please contact press@storyfile.comSubject *Select…StoryFile for MuseumsStoryFile for LegaciesHoloGlassMedia InquiryOtherEmail *Name *PhoneMessageSubmitreCAPTCHA v3: Verifying...STORYFILEStoryFile is an AI-powered video platform that allows users to create and train conversational AI interactions, making AI conversations feel more human.CompanyMedia/PressBook DemoContact UsSOLUTIONSInstitutionsLegaciesLegalPrivacy PolicyTerms of ServiceAI Ethics PolicySub-Processors ListProfessional Service Terms© 2026 StoryFile. All rights reserved.Media/PressContactBook a demo --- Back to articlesPreserving Florida Voices — Interactive Holocaust Testimony Comes to OrlandoFeb 3, 2026On International Holocaust Remembrance Day, January 27, Suzanne Schneider sat beneath studio lights in Orlando and answered questions she has carried with her for decades: Were you afraid? Were you in a concentration camp?“It’s a responsibility,” she said quietly. “I just have to do it.”Schneider, 88, a Winter Park resident, survived Nazi-occupied Poland as a Jewish child. Her memories are vivid: hiding silently in a hayloft where she was forbidden to speak for fear of discovery, pretending to be a distant relative of a Catholic couple who took her in when she fell ill, navigating a world where survival required constant vigilance. Now, through a series of structured StoryFile interviews recorded at Green Slate Studios in Orlando, those memories are being preserved in a way that will allow future generations to ask her those same questions—and hear her answers in her own voice.“I think it’s funny, really,” Schneider reflected. “I’ll be dead, and then I’ll still be talking, in my red pants.”Her testimony will become a cornerstone of the forthcoming Holocaust Museum for Hope & Humanity, slated to open in downtown Orlando in 2027. The museum’s leadership has made a deliberate decision: local survivor stories will anchor the visitor experience.“We have made efforts to really root the core experience of the new museum in Florida stories,” said Suzanne Grimmer, senior director of museum experiences. “That’s really important to us.”Using StoryFile’s conversational video platform, Schneider answered roughly 450 questions during her recording sessions—ranging from the historical to the deeply personal. Visitors to the museum will encounter her on a life-size screen, seated across from an empty chair. When they ask a question, the system will draw exclusively from her recorded responses, creating a natural, face-to-face dialogue grounded entirely in her lived experience.“When you walk by her, it will start a conversation,” Grimmer explained. “We will put a chair across from her and you can talk.”The goal is not simply to present history, but to create a moment of connection—one that reaches both heart and mind. By enabling visitors to engage directly with survivors’ own words and expressions, the museum is transforming testimony from a static archive into an active exchange.Schneider is not alone in this effort. The museum has also recorded 94-year-old survivor Harry Lowenstein, who was separated from his parents as a teenager and imprisoned in multiple concentration camps. “It was incredible he was able to survive,” Grimmer said. “He remembers Kristallnacht.” His story, she noted, resonates particularly with young visitors: “Middle schoolers and high schoolers can relate to his story. I think they see themselves in it.”In addition, the museum plans to record two Central Florida “liberators”—Allied troops who witnessed the camps firsthand at the war’s end—broadening the exhibit’s perspective while maintaining its focus on firsthand experience.The investment is substantial, but museum leaders view it as essential. As the survivor generation ages, preserving authentic testimony becomes both urgent and foundational. While the Holocaust Center continues its partnership with national archives for educational programming, capturing local voices ensures that Florida’s own survivors remain central to the museum’s identity.For Schneider, the reason is clear.“It’s an obligation I have,” she said. “As long as I can do it, I’m going to do it. It’s history, and it has to be told.”With interactive, first-person testimony at its core, the Holocaust Museum for Hope & Humanity is building more than an exhibition—it is creating an enduring conversation between past and future, ensuring that the voices of those who lived through history will continue to be heard.Want to Learn More?🔗 Orlando SentinelMore ArticlesNaval Aviation MuseumSep 18, 2025Museum of Kansas CitySep 4, 2025New York TimesJun 15, 2025National Medal of Honor MuseumApr 18, 2025Japanese American National MuseumMay 23, 2024LOAD MORESTORYFILEStoryFile is an AI-powered video platform that allows users to create and train conversational AI interactions, making AI conversations feel more human.CompanyMedia/PressBook DemoContact UsSOLUTIONSInstitutionsLegaciesLegalPrivacy PolicyTerms of ServiceAI Ethics PolicySub-Processors ListProfessional Service Terms© 2026 StoryFile. All rights reserved.Media/PressContactBook a demo


