News



November, 7th, 2008 06:32am

We have our product comparison complete!

The XPJ Projector has proven to be superior to the competitors in almost every single way. With a picture that's ten times brighter than the competition, the clear choice is the XPJ Projector.

Click Here to see our Product Comparison



November, 7th, 2008 04:32am

Our warranty and return policy are now available for viewing and download! You can see them here.



November, 6th, 2008 06:13pm

Geek Magazine featured the XPJ Projector in a recent article. You can download the PDF here

"In the home-video market, the race to bigger and better TV screens has mostly been confined to plasma and HDTVs. The problem with those, of course-besides the hefty price tags-was the dang things had to stay in one room. Portable they ain't. Enter the new, light projection TVs. Portable they is. What was once an 80-pound, three-lens beast that hung from a ceiling in a fixed position is now the size of a large cigar box weighing less than 10 pounds. But the sometimes-hefty price tag ($1,200 to $3,400) and risk was that they're fragile souls, and if the bulb burns out, you're looking at $200 to $300 to replace it. Enter the XPJ Home Movies projector from Olens Technology. Retailing for just under $300, it offers a less sharp image (640x480 pixels VGA) but an amazing durability, a knockabout portability and replacement bulbs that are just $24.95 (a second bulb is uncluded). I've long missed the drive-in motion pictures of yore and decided to put an XPJ through the paces. First I blasted a movie inside and got a super-sharp, 6-foot-wide picture against a living room wall. Then one of our sons got a hold of it and tried a videogame. Good stuff. But that seemed silly-we could that with a plasma TV-I needed to take it to the great outdoors. In my backyard I hooked it up to a portable DVD player and kept backing up until I got a full 12-foot-wide screen and a face full of movies. Like the old drive-in theaters, I found a few simple truths: Movies with lots of dark scenes suffered, but nothing beat classics like Death Race 2000, the Night of the Hunter and Army of Darkness.Best of all was John Wayne's three-strip Technicolor 1960 classic North to Alaska. While the XPJ comes with two built-in speakers (that really will give your ears drive-in deja vu), I opted to run the DVD audio outputs through a boom box with detachable speakers. the result: movie nirvana. I may never go in the house again."
by Mark A. Altman, Heather Campbell, Shawn Sanders, Paul Zimmerman and Jeff Bond