Aurzen’s Zip Cyber Edition is pitched as a tri-fold, ultra-portable DLP projector that turns quick “phone-to-wall” viewing into something closer to a pocket display system. The Cyber Edition styling is a reskin meant to signal exposed-tech vibes, but the practical story is wireless casting: direct mirroring and AirPlay-style playback, plus a stand-and-place workflow that’s meant to feel as casual as setting a device on a table. https://aurzen.com/products/aurzen-zip-tri-fold-portable-projector
In use, the Zip leans on automatic image correction so you can tilt it up or down and let keystone compensation square the frame, with a small onboard speaker for basic audio and Bluetooth for headphones or a car stereo. Specs floating around the Zip line point to native 720p with 1080p input support, brightness in the ~100 ANSI-lumen class, and a built-in 5000 mAh battery that’s roughly “one short film” territory, with USB-C PD fast charging and the option to extend runtime via an external power bank for longer play.
The wider Aurzen lineup shown here frames portability as a spectrum: from pocket projection to living-room brightness. The EAZZE D1 MAX is positioned as a higher-output, mixed-use model with Google TV (including mainstream streaming without a separate stick), 4K input support, MEMC motion smoothing, Wi-Fi/Bluetooth connectivity, and built-in Dolby Audio with higher-wattage speakers—basically the “set it up fast, still looks like a home-theater feed” category for a flexible room.
On the “smart platform” side, Aurzen also leans into Roku integration with the D1R Cube, one of the early projectors to run the Roku TV interface natively, combining 1080p output with 4K input support, app-first navigation, and portable sizing. In this video—filmed at CES Las Vegas 2026—the same portability theme shows up in playful optical add-ons (like a galaxy lens effect) and in the BOOM-series vibe of visible speaker design, lighting accents, and bass processing that’s described in algorithmic, transient-control language.
The most concrete mobility demo is the Travel Play accessory concept for a Tesla Model Y: a custom screen kit that stores in the trunk and turns the rear into a pop-up cinema for camping, parking breaks, or kid-friendly downtime. The interesting technical angle isn’t just projection, but systems thinking—casting pipeline, battery strategy, mounting geometry, and audio routing to Bluetooth/car speakers—so the setup behaves like a small, transportable AV stack rather than a fragile gadget you only use at home here.
I’m publishing about 100+ videos from CES 2026, I upload about 4 videos per day at 5AM/11AM/5PM/11PM CET/EST. Check out all my CES 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjaMwKMgLb6ja_yZuano19e
This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 ), watch all my DJI Pocket 3 videos here https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvhDlWIAxm_pR9dp7ArSkhKK
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Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY



