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iPhone-style Flat Sides for Xiaomi Redmi Note 11 Series

Xiaomi Corporation, doing business in Asia as Xiaomi Inc., is a Chinese company that designs and manufactures consumer electronics and associated software and home appliances, and other everyday things for the home. It is the second-biggest smartphone maker behind Samsung, with the majority of its devices running the MIUI operating system (software development). In 2020, the business was expected to sell 146.3 million handsets, and its MIUI operating system will have more than 500 million monthly active users, according to the company. Furthermore, the company manufactures a wide range of consumer electronics products, including TVs, flashlights, uncrewed aerial vehicles, and air purifiers based on its Internet of Things and Xiaomi Smart Home product ecosystems. The term “Xiaomi” literally translates as millet and rice, and it is derived from the Buddhist notion of beginning from the bottom and working one’s way up to the top.

Xiaomi was started in Beijing in 2010 by Lei Jun, who is now a multi-billionaire, and six senior colleagues when he was 40 years old. Xiaomi is currently valued at over $100 billion. Lei had developed both Kingsoft and Joyo.com, which he sold to Amazon in 2004 for a total of 75 million dollars. After releasing its debut smartphone in August 2011, Xiaomi quickly rose to become the company with the most significant market share of smartphones sold in China by 2014. By 2015, it was engaged in developing a wide variety of consumer electronics.

According to Canalys, Xiaomi beat Apple Inc. to become the second-largest seller of smartphones in the world in the second quarter of 2021, with a 17 percent market share. In addition, the firm is placed 338th on the Fortune Global 500 list and is the youngest company on the list. To maintain it’s pricing as near its production expenses and bill of materials costs as possible, Xiaomi keeps most of its devices on the market for 18 months, which is far longer than the average for smartphone firms. In addition, the corporation uses inventory optimization and flash sales to maintain its inventory at a minimum. In the beginning, the firm solely offered its items online; however, it gradually expanded its retail presence by opening physical storefronts.

Redmi

Xiaomi has a majority stake in Redmi, a subsidiary of the Chinese electronics business. It was initially unveiled in July 2013 as a low-cost smartphone line, and it became a distinct sub-brand of Xiaomi in 2019. It produces entry-level and mid-range handsets, whereas Xiaomi itself manufactures upper-range and flagship Mi phones and other products. Like the Redmi series, Mi phones run android sharing with Xiaomi’s MIUI user interface on top. The Redmi lineup is split into three categories: the entry-level Redmi, the mid-range Redmi Note, and the top-of-the-line Redmi K. In addition, the unrelated Mi an Android One series, although being a member of the Xiaomi Mi lineup’s upper-range, is similarly positioned in a comparable market niche to Redmi smartphones despite being unconnected to Redmi devices. Compared to other Xiaomi smartphones, the most major distinction between them is that they employ less-expensive components, making them more affordable while maintaining better features. According to a study published in August 2014 by The Wall Street Journal, Xiaomi had a market share of 4 percent of smartphone shipping rankings in China during the second quarter of the 2014 fiscal year. Sales of the Redmi smartphone were cited as a contributing cause of the shipping rankings increase.

Redmi Note 10

The Redmi Note 11 is a series of Android-based smartphones produced by Redmi, a sub-brand of Xiaomi Inc., part of the Redmi Note series. This series will be launched around the globe in March 2021 and in China in May 2021. It is the successor of the Redmi Note 9 series of smartphones, which was debuted in 2020 and is still in production. Depending on the country, the Redmi Note 11 5G may be sold as the POCO M3 Pro or the Redmi Note 11T, among other names. In addition, specifically for the Japanese market, Xiaomi announced the Redmi Note Note 11 JE, a variant of the Redmi Note 11 5G that has comparable characteristics to the Redmi Note 11 5G but with a different CPU battery and inclusion of IP68 water resistance.

Xiaomi Redmi Note 11 series

Earlier this week, Xiaomi launched the Redmi Note 11 series, which continues the company’s successful line of budget-friendly devices that have proven to be very popular in India and other places. Overall, there are four phones in the series; however, they are only distinguishable in unique ways. They all feature what Xiaomi calls a “trendy flat-edge body” — in other words, they all look like iPhones — and the vast majority of their specifications are shared by at least two of the devices in the lineup. The way it all works is as follows:

The Redmi Note 11 Pro 5G is the most expensive variant, and it is equipped with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 695 CPU that supports 5G. In addition to the 6.67-inch 120Hz 1080p OLED display, there is a 5,000mAh battery with 67W fast charging and a 108-megapixel primary camera accompanied by an 8-megapixel ultrawide and a 2-megapixel macro camera. The phone also has a fingerprint sensor. Unfortunately, it’s also the only phone in this series that doesn’t include a 2-megapixel “depth camera,” which isn’t a huge deal considering the competition.

The Redmi Note 11 Pro is very similar to the Pro 5G in appearance; however, it is powered by a MediaTek Helio G96 chipset that only enables LTE connection up to a maximum of 150Mbps. The Redmi Note 11 has a Qualcomm Snapdragon 680 processor, a smaller 6.43-inch 90Hz 1080p LCD, a 50-megapixel primary camera, 33W fast charging, and only up to 6GB of RAM rather than the more full 8GB of RAM found in the Mi 8.

Unlike its predecessor, the Redmi Note 11S has a smaller screen and faster charging (33W), but it features the same Helio G96 engine, a 108-megapixel primary camera, and the option of up to 8GB of RAM as the Redmi Note 11 Pro. 5,000mAh batteries, side-mounted fingerprint sensors, headphone connectors, and up to 128GB of internal storage are all included in the price of these phones. Xiaomi was unable to disclose pricing information in advance of this launch, which was crucial for such a diverse variety of goods and SKUs, which were supposed to be inexpensive and competitively priced in the marketplace. For example, consider that the Redmi Note 10 Pro, which featured a screen and camera identical to this year’s model, cost around $260 when first introduced in India.

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