
Okay, confession time! Today’s September afternoon, my 7-year-old wants to rewatch our beach trip – but my phone gallery’s a jungle. Blurry dog photos, 200 park swings… where’s her scooter clip? Sweating like decoding rocket science! Then I read about DigitalGlue’s Creative Intelligence at IBC2025. *Bam.* Suddenly, ‘where’s that video?’ headaches feel solvable. Not magic, but hope: reclaim your joyful moments!
How Professional AI Tools Help Parents Find That One Video

Let’s unpack this like a Korean-Canadian dad packing a picnic blanket (easy, efficient, and ready to enjoy the moment!). DigitalGlue’s new Creative Intelligence – it’s basically an AI wizard for video teams, letting them chat with their media library like it’s a best friend: ‘Show me clips where the kid’s laughing with ice cream on her nose!‘ and *poof*, there they are.
Imagine this: “Where is the video where Mia made the cardboard dragon breathe glitter fire?” and your phone instantly finds it – no scrolling, no muttering, just… flipping through our own storybook! For parents, AI tools mean finally finding precious family moments without the stress. No more digging through folders like an archaeologist in a digital cave!
“Time should be spent creating, not searching.”
Their CEO Tim Anderson nails it – creating isn’t just media production for us. It’s those irreplaceable moments when your 7-year-old is announcing, “Daddy, this is my robot castle made of laundry baskets!” while you’re simultaneously navigating sibling fun fights and snack needs. Oh-ho-ho, does that hit home? Would you rather film pillow forts or be part of them?
Why Finding Family Moments Matters for Parents Everywhere

You know what cracks me up? Right now when we’re unpacking backpacks after kindergarten pickup sometimes the blankie-fort becomes a Roald Dahl-worthy adventure. Just like Carol Shields wrote “Until I have CI, every setback is setup for more joy” – turns out, every memory hunt becomes family-building fuel. Case in point: yesterday morning’s dragon video quest. “Daddy, didn’t we have that cardboard dragon with the wings?” and snap! There it was – her creation suddenly the stuff of epic bedtime legends.
I’m watching this AI revolution like an owner’s manual writer at a Transformer convention – kinda like we are now. But hey! This means real liberation for families who are living their stories, not archiving them. In our house, we take ‘action shots first day school’ culture serious! Yet without tools, it becomes stress – literally like flipping through endless photos while simultaneously mentoring twenty sketch universes and making apple smiles. Research shows even pro YouTubers struggle with creativity fatigue… and us parents? We’re lifestyle creators running on coffee and love!
How to Use Prompt-Based Parenting to Find Family Moments Today

As much I’m excited about CI’s upcoming 2026 arrival, guess what? Its soul teaches us gems today! And I’ve tested these with my early-elementary: storytelling through prompts is real bonding!
Three today-tested wins: First, talk like sharing travel stories – she names her crayons superheroes already, so “Dear phone, display shower singing moments exactly like Chuseok joy!” gives us instant laughter. We actually used “Find the dragon video!” yesterday – easy peasy like that.
Second, construct memory landmarks – when we celebrated her first lost tooth, we declared “This is OUR Champions League!” Months later, searching “Champions League Mia” leads us straight there. Truth moment: Searching “Rainbow puddle jump Mia” let us reconnect with last week’s magical afternoon.
But here’s the true key:
Protect Creative Time – create a 10-min ‘no film zone’. Early-2026 CI hints we might stop being digital librarians. For now, ten minutes of unfiltered imagination turns Friday night fort into ‘What color chairs made the invisible kitchen?’. When Mia transformed autumn leaves into pastry artista outside, gone were phones filming, present were two pairs of grass-dusted sneakers and best burger recipes using couch pillows! The beauty? CI’s future power already starts today – who needs filming over glittery dragon snacks anyway?
Where Real Magic Lives: Hope Beyond AI Parenting Tools

I keep testing tomorrow’s tech today: “Dear phone, show funny Mia leaf-pile pastry experiments” gets us roars of laughter. But then comes the real magic – one rainy weekday, she shouted “DADDY! Where’s the dragon’s chocolate soot factory?!” Phones facedown. 100% present playtime. Because future AI tools don’t record moments – they restore presence.
When your child shows something like Mia’s recent jungle adventure drawing, rather than tagging or captioning, try co-developing its story world together! “Oh my stream – tell me about that chocolate-factory explosion!” No lost videos – just your child’s narrating keeps it immortal. She started recording her own voice notes: “Today I discovered ļ’ is how you say dragon’s dirty toes!” We’re both learning!
Best part? Mia wants to invent our family’s AI vocabulary – isn’t that freedom itself? DigitalGlue’s whole vision hits deep: She’ll stop shouting “WHERE’S THAT MEMORY?!” because searching now becomes collaborative storytelling – not urgency. Now, who besides me remembers those pajama midnight quest games?
“Time should be spent creating, not searching!” – suddenly, technology bends to our parenting beat – no longer gallery-digging battle, but joy planting seeds!”
This new tech wave isn’t just SciFi spotlight – its most important job? Magnifying those raw childhood sparks we’re already stepping through daily. One “Where’s my dragon castle?” chat less tomorrow might mean extra drawing minutes for Mia – or dare I say – visiting Seoul Street Ramen pop-up with her diorama buddy Betty! And isn’t that the dream?
So breathe deep, parents. This IBC2025 whisper promises: your family time crafting magic is worth more than any digital archive ever assembled. And technology’s next verse? Inventive turns indeed – because finally, what was once priceless now feels perfectly achievable.
Source: IBC2025: DigitalGlue previews Creative Intelligence, We and the Color, 2025-09-15
