Sony Rolly

Rolly is an egg-shaped digital robotic music player made by Sony[1], combining music functions with robotic dancing. It has two wheels that allow it to rotate and spin, as well as two bands of colored LED light running around its edge and cup-like "wings" (or "arms" according to the Sony sonystyle USA website) which can open and close on either end, all of which can be synchronized to the music being played.

Sony Rolly
Sony Rolly on display at a trade show in Japan.
ManufacturerSony
Price$399 US

Rolly has several operating modes, including Bluetooth functionality. Rolly can play music streamed directly from any Bluetooth-enabled cell phone, computer, or mp3 player. Rolly is able to dance along to streaming music, but the Rolly Choreographer software produces far better results when it analyzes tracks and creates motion files before loading them onto Rolly. The Rolly player uses .mtf files to store motion data along with a particular music track. Pre-made motion files can be downloaded and uploaded from Rolly Go.

Rolly also has a G force sensor (accelerometer) which detects if the player is laying horizontally or being held upright. When held upright, the track next/previous can be controlled by the top wheel and volume up/down can be controlled by the bottom wheel. Tracks can be shuffled by holding the unit upright, pressing the button once, then shaking the unit up and down (light color changes to purple). You can return to continuous play (light color blue) by simply repeating this process.

Rolly has 2 gigabytes of flash memory to store music files.[2]

On August 20, 2007, Sony launched an initial teaser advertising campaign for the product.[3] The product was unveiled on September 20, 2007, and went on sale in Japan on September 29, and was for sale at the Sony sonystyle USA website[4] for $229.99 USD, down from $399.99 USD. It is available in black and white. Sony offers the "Engrave it." option for this item, and a number of accessories, including "arms" in different colors.

The Rolly itself is currently out-of-stock in some countries, and all accessories are listed as "clearance". According to a Sony Style assistant, the Rolly has been discontinued in the US. Sonystyle.com confirms this, as well as Sony's UK online store [5] In some countries it is still on sale on Sony website.

Sony BSP60

In 2015 Sony presented a Bluetooth speaker featuring a similar design and featureset as the Rolly boasted, with the addition of an OLED display and support for voice commands.[6]

gollark: You can get 1TB microSD cards now. Imagine the density of a bucket of those.
gollark: It should switch to one system, and be less confusing.
gollark: I still don't know exactly how you're meant to do the conditional tense thingy (if I were/if I was).
gollark: I like to help future linguisten along by using odd plural forms at random.
gollark: True, but we have an awful lot of written stuff now.

References

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