Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Xiaomi’s 11T Pro with 120W fast charging finally set to launch outside of Europe

Add as a preferred source on Google

Xiaomi has started teasing the launch of its 11T Pro outside Europe. To recall, it was first released in Europe in September last year as the first smartphone with 120-watt fast charging for its 5,000mAh battery. Nearly four months after the release, it is all set to go official in India on January 19.

More recently, Xiaomi India took to Twitter to tease the launch of the 11T Pro, marketing it as the ‘The Hyperphone” for its blazing-fast charging speed. It’s expected to be launched in three storage variants of 8GB RAM/28GB storage, 8GB/256GB, and 12GB/256GB. In Europe, it is an upper-midrange smartphone that starts at 649 euros, but it’s likely to be priced lower in India.

Recommended Videos

It takes a revolution to create a powerful smartphone like this.
Introducing #𝗧𝗵𝗲𝗛𝘆𝗽𝗲𝗿𝗽𝗵𝗼𝗻𝗲 – Xiaomi 11T Pro
Experience the perfect amalgamation of Design & Power on 19.01.2022

The Revolution continues.#HyperchargeRevolution

Know more: https://t.co/2syPoOtfsz pic.twitter.com/3MJcrEZzqu

— Xiaomi India (@XiaomiIndia) January 10, 2022

While Xiaomi India will be disclosing more Mi 11T Pro features in the coming days, it is likely to be similar to the European version. It comes equipped with a 6.6-inch FHD+ 120Hz 10-bit AMOLED display with Dolby Vision, and Gorilla Glass Victus. The smartphone is powered by last year’s flagship Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 SoC, paired with LPDDR5 RAM, UFS 3.1 storage.

On the camera front, it sports a triple rear camera setup that is led by a 108-megapixel primary camera, an 8MP ultrawide angle lens, and a 5MP macro camera. Plus, you get a 16MP selfie shooter. Other features include Dolby Atomos-supported dual stereo speakers tuned by Harmon Kardon, and MIUI 12.5 based on Android 11.

The Xiaomi 11T Pro will be competing against the likes of OnePlus 9RT, which is also launching in the same week in India, bringing another competitive midrange phone to the market.

Prakhar Khanna
Prakhar Khanna is an independent consumer tech journalist. He contributes to Digital Trends' Mobile section with features and…
Gemini Intelligence has strict requirements, and your phone may not qualify
Gemini Intelligence

Google’s new Gemini Intelligence platform is quickly becoming one of the biggest talking points in the Android world right now. After being highlighted during this week’s Android Show, the feature is already being tied to several upcoming premium foldables and flagship phones. But there’s a catch: not every high-end Android device will be able to run it. And surprisingly, even some of Google and Samsung’s latest foldables may miss out.

According to Google’s requirements, Gemini Intelligence isn’t just another software update you can casually push to older devices. The company appears to be building this around a much stricter hardware and long-term software support system. To qualify, a phone needs a flagship-grade chipset, at least 12GB RAM, support for AI Core, and Gemini Nano v3 or newer. That immediately creates a problem for several current-generation phones.

Read more
Meta’s Ray-Ban Display now types messages from your finger movements
Neural Handwriting is a really cool feature, but Meta opening the Ray-Ban Display to developers is the quiet announcement that turns a clever wearable into a platform with immense possibilities.
Meta Ray-Ban Display and EMG Band.

Six months into its life, the Meta Ray-Ban Display is starting to look less like an experiment, thanks to what is arguably the most significant update Meta has ever pushed for the device. 

The headline feature is Neural Handwriting, which is now available to every Ray-Ban Display owner, having spent its early months in limited access for Messenger and WhatsApp users. 

Read more
WhatsApp is testing disappearing messages that wait for you to actually read them before vanishing
WhatsApp's new After Reading timer deletes messages only after the recipient reads them.
whatsapp-disappearing-messages-after-reading-timer

WhatsApp has always let you send messages that vanish on a timer, but the clock starts the moment you hit send, not when the other person actually read it. That means a message could sit unread for hours and still disappear before anyone sees it.

This is why WhatsApp is testing a new feature called 'After Reading' timer for disappearing messages, spotted in the latest iOS beta update by WABetaInfo.

Read more