Hear Me Out is a speculative analog universal translator, that would serve as a replacement for our current translator apps.
Imagine you’re in Japan, meeting up with a potential business partner. However, you do not speak Japanese and they do not speak English.
This is where you take out your Hear Me Out and pass one to your counterpart. Now you can have a fluid conversation with someone you do not share a language.
Thanks to the bone conduction system, you can still hear the other person’s original sentences, helping you gauge tone, emotion, and tact.


Hear me out contains three components: the receiver, the translator, and the bone conduction head pod.
Placed on the ear, the receiver is the first element you see, as it is attached to your earlobe. It records the sound waves emitted by the person you are speaking to, simultaneously sending it to the translator chip. Subsequently, the patch processes the information, recognizes the language, proceeds to translate it to your chosen language, and then sends the translated sound waves to the bone-conduction head pod. The head pod then vibrates, communicating the translated text to the user.





