The Yari has got a pretty decent 5 megapixel auto focus camera, but it's main focus point is another thing - gesture gaming. And we're not talking about accelerometer-based gesture recognition.
Thanks to an optical tracker technology developed by GestureTek, the Sony Ericsson Yari can use its camera to detect your movements and translate them into games moves. It can even do wireless multiplayer.
The technology has already been available to Japanese DoCoMo cellphones but it's only now that it's making its way to world-wide availability.
* General: GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz, UMTS 900/2100, GPRS/EDGE class 10, HSDPA 3.6Mbps
* Form factor: Slider
* Dimensions: 100 x 48 x 15.7 mm, 115 g
* Display: 2.4-inch 256K color TFT display, 240 x 320 pixel resolution
* Memory: 60MB integrated memory, hot-swappable microSD card slot (up to 16GB)
* UI: Proprietary Flash-based UI
* Still camera: 5 megapixel autofocus camera with LED flash, geo-tagging, face detection, smile detection
* Video recording: QVGA video recording
* Connectivity: Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP, GPS receiver with A-GPS support
* Misc: Gesture and motion-based gaming, Shake control, SensMe
* Battery: 1000 mAh battery
The Sony Ericsson Yari also has a built-in GPS receiver to deliver location-based services as accurately as they come.
Unfortunately, Wi-Fi support is not present on our Yari test unit despite the numerous videos presenting that in YouTube and such. As Sony Ericsson are not advertising the feature, we guess the retail unit won't be Wi-Fi capable as well.
For starters there are two small knobs above the display, which are actually gaming keys. Those are a bit small but putting larger ones there will probably have devastating effect on the phone's design. Between the keys in question are the light sensor, the secondary camera and the earpiece.