Finally had time to disassemble this thing.
It's a Himax LCoS chip
pico projector but using laser light source. One benefit of laser is it is in focus at any distance. Actually I tested and the focus ring is locked in place with epoxy to achieve focus from about 2 feet to 30 feet or maybe more, didn't have more room to check.
The laser speckle is surprisngly less than with the PicoP laser scanning projectors but still there.
I was interested what kind of diodes were used inside and if any deskeckler was used so I dissassembled it.
The illumination compartment is very similar to what we have in laser show projectors, but the beams are expanded more and go through a "flyeye" lens for the profile to become more uniform, like with LEDs I guess?
Here's at another angle:
No idea what these two are. The thin one is a film, not a plate.
There were also two mysterious wires going to a black plastic box attached to the flyeye lens. I'm not really sure what that this but since my tweezer can easily move the flyeye lens the box is holding I'm inclined to say it acts as a vibrating speckle reducer, although I don't know what component that is really.
I haven't been able to run the projector with the cover exposed due to short ribbon cables all over the place to check if the beam goes to the LCoS and then to the projection lenses collimated or not but I'm probably the only one here who cares.
I expected the diodes to be some custom or AR goggles surface mount diodes but they appear to be what we use in low power single mode laser show projectors, just put in an aluminum plate and the tips soldered to a ribbon cable.
Maybe some people here can even identify them. No mention of the power of the diodes or what diodes are used, just that the output is 100 ANSI lumens.
Other than the clear focus this design sadly doesn't appear to have a future competing with scanned laser projectors and LEDs as those are just much brighter and still same footprint.