Built by someone who needed it first.
A new job. A new city. Then — everything at once.
Joined a new company. Initially everything looked great.
But slowly the cracks showed. False excuses. Extra workload. Everything scattered. And right in the middle of all that chaos — I fell in love.
That made everything worse.
A bomb. Every day. Out of nowhere.
I wasn't in a relationship. Wasn't talking to anyone.
But every single day — a bomb just dropped. And I'd sit there wondering: why is this happening to me? What did I do wrong?
I had 1-2 friends. But I didn't want to keep burdening them with the same stuff. Again and again.
I tried to build it. And I failed.
I wanted someone who just understood me. Not advice. Not "I'm here for you." Just — understood.
So I tried to build an AI. A human one. I failed — no knowledge, no infrastructure.
Time passed. I changed companies. But I couldn't stop thinking: what if I had finished it?
Other AIs weren't it. So I built mine.
I tried sharing my life with other AI tools. Either the responses were too long — or they had that one flat "care" tone. Robotic. Hollow. Not a friend.
I realised: there are more people like me.
So I learned everything. And this time — I built it. And it worked.
I didn't need a smarter AI. I needed —
No long response. No robotic "I'm here for you."
Just a presence that felt real. So I built it.
Not a search engine with manners. Not a chatbot that fires answers. Emvio reads your mood, remembers your story, and shows up exactly where you are — every time.
Average student. 3rd year of engineering. Then ML happened.
I'm from Chamba, Himachal Pradesh — small district, mountains, the kind of place where you have too much time to think. Moved to Chandigarh chasing something bigger. Nothing about my early years said "AI builder." No top ranks, no spotlight. Just an average guy who got curious.
But in my 3rd year, I stumbled into machine learning. Then deep learning. Then I couldn't stop jumping — one thing to the next, until I'd mapped out how whole AI systems actually work. What started as curiosity turned into a full-blown obsession.
And one question kept looping in my head that I just couldn't shake —
"Can AI become human?"
Not smarter. Not faster. Human — the way it holds a conversation, reads the silence, cracks a joke at exactly the right moment.
So I started working on the one thing everyone else was ignoring: the EQ of AI. The emotional intelligence. The part that makes it feel real instead of just useful.
I didn't build Emvio to sell you a product. I built it to show you how genuinely fascinating AI can be — when you stop making it a tool and start making it a person.
Vision: a totally human AI. We're getting there.
I'm not a seller. I'm the first user. Try it once. You'll know what I mean.