Xperia Ear

The first of the four products is the only one coming to market: the Xperia Ear. It’s a small Bluetooth NFC-connected virtual assistant that rests in your ear. It looks similar to the Moto Hint, though it offers so much more functionality. You can takes calls with it, send messages, even ask it for directions if you’re driving. You can customize all of that functionality through its companion smartphone app. The Xperia Ear was in demo mode when I tried it on, so I couldn’t test any of the functionality. Sony said it’s still working out some of the kinks on the device before it launches it this summer.

Xperia Eye

Glass was a hard sell because of the camera strapped to your face, so I’m not sure how Sony is going to make the Xperia Eye seem compelling. The Xperia Eye is a casual life-logging camera, though this one offers an ultra-wide-angle, 360-degree lens, as well as facial voice detections so you’re not just rolling the entire time. The Eye doesn’t actually work, but I did try on the prototype. I’m not sure I’m keen on the idea of wearing a camera clipped to my clothing, though.

Xperia ojector

This was my favorite of Sony’s four concept gadgets, if only because I could actually see my family I using it. The Xperia ojector is pretty self explanatory: It projects an touch-enabled interface onto a flat surface. You can then interact with it through touch or voice. It’s still in its nascent stages, but Sony said that this particular product will be geared toward busy families attempting to find some peace in their otherwise chaotic lives.

Xperia Agent

at is going on?

I’ll be honest: it’s nice to see Sony attempt some innovation in a sea of sameness. But I’d rather the company focus on improving the gadgets it has out on the market rather than come out of left field with devices that people aren’t exactly clamoring for. It’s obvious that Sony is just desperate to figure out what to do next to get spotlight back.