Impressive, but don't forget these:
In From Russia with love the pager was used in combo with a car
phone. Well, it was 1963... James also had a gadget that would detect
whether your phone line was bugged or not, simply by placing it under the
phone. He also has a tape recorder hidden in a camera.
In Goldfinger, a seagull on the water is actually James swimming,
with his snorkel hidden by the bird. In this movie he also had two
different homing devices, one for placement under a car and one placed in the
heel of his shoe. In the Q lab, we can also see a teargas spraying parking
meter.
Another homing device was used in Thunderball, in the form of a
swallowable (?) pill.
You only live twice introduced a device for opening safes. Just turn
the knob and numbers on the device would display the correct code, like magic.
James also had a rocket launcher disguised as a cigarette. Would never work
today, where smoking is rarely allowed...
In On Her Majesty's Secret Service there was a minature camera,
which of course was huge by today's standards.
Diamonds Are Forever had James using an fingerprints imitator,
much like the stuff they use on Mission Impossible. He also had a gadget that
would change any voice to someone else's voice. I cannot see how that would be
abused if it was available to the public... James also had a wire gun, good
for scaling buildings.
In Live and let die he had a hairbrush that also was a morse
code radio transmitter.
The man with the golden gun was the film where James had a fake
third nipple! Very weird indeed.
In The spy who loved me James had a watch that could dispense a
message printed on a small paper roll. The introductory skiing scene sees Bond
using his ski pole gun.
For your eyes only had that lovely arm cast in Q's lab that would
swing away, crushing the face of whoever's to your side. Also, this is where
they had that computer for creating phantom images of villains, and then
matching them against Interpol's database. In this one, his watch could
display message on a small digital display, plus it was a radio. This is used in
the end where the parrot is talking to Margaret Thatcher.
In Octopussy James uses his pen to melt metals by dispensing some
kind of acid, and thereby escaping from his imprisonment. This time his watch
has a small liquid crystal display with which he can follow the
villain.
Never say never again had James' watch shooting a laser beam that
would cut through anything.
In A view to a kill James searches for microchips with some kind
of device that sends out emps. He also had a sophisticated bug detector that
would indicate the customary bugging device in James' room. Also, James had
sunglasses that would look through one-way mirrors, a handy check
replicator, a ring camera] and a credit card lock pick device.
License to kill introduced plastic explosive in toothpaste tube
and a laser Polaroid camera.
Reference: I did check some James Bond websites for some of these!