KORENANI Guides
KORENANI Guides
Practical family guides for walks, nature observation, clearer recognition photos, multilingual audio, collections, plans, and photo data.

A Parent-Child Guide to Observing Insects
A calm look-point-photograph routine for observing insects without touching or capturing them.

Camera, Photo Permissions, and Deletion Controls
A plain-language guide to what camera and photo access enables and which deletion controls are implemented.

How to Photograph Flowers for Image Recognition
A practical checklist for photographing flowers clearly without picking or handling them.

How to Take Clearer Photos for Image Recognition
Six simple camera habits that give families a clearer photo to inspect and discuss.

Make a Multilingual Travel Field Guide with Kids
A low-pressure way to photograph, listen to, and revisit the everyday objects children notice while traveling.

Turn a Family Walk into a Personal Field Guide
A simple take-look-listen-save routine for turning everyday walks into a field guide made from your child's discoveries.

Use Collections and Quizzes to Revisit Discoveries
A practical look at saving selected discoveries and returning to them through albums, conversation, and optional quizzes.

What to Do When an Image Recognition Result Looks Wrong
A parent-friendly retry process that treats recognition as a clue rather than a guaranteed answer.

General, Insect, and Plant Recognition Modes
How to pick between KORENANI's three recognition modes — general, insect, and plant — for the best answer.

How Kids Can Learn Object Names from Photos
How photo-based object-name learning works, and how to make the most of KORENANI at home.

How Photo Data Flows During Image Recognition
Where photos go, what touches them, and what KORENANI stores on its side — explained without jargon.

KORENANI Plans and Monthly Quotas
How KORENANI's four plans organize recognition allowances and where families can confirm the current values.

Multilingual Text-to-Speech for Kids' Learning
How KORENANI's spoken labels in nine languages turn snapshots into language exposure for kids.