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

High from beating Apple in China, Xiaomi launches the $220, dual-camera Mi 5X phone

Add as a preferred source on Google

On the same day analyst data shows Xiaomi winning back market share in China, the popular smartphone manufacturer has announced a brand-new device: The Xiaomi Mi 5X, and it’s a return to what the company does best. It’s not going to cost very much, offers must-have features, and looks great in an iPhone-like way. Exactly what we expect from Xiaomi.

The Mi 5X is a midrange smartphone modeled on the recently revealed Mi 6 flagship phone, from which it borrows its standout feature — a dual-lens rear camera. The two lenses both take 12-megapixel photos, but perform different tasks. The first is a wide-angle lens with a 1.25-micron pixel size and an f/2.2 aperture. The second lens has an f/2.6 aperture, a smaller 1-micron pixel size, and takes telephoto images.

Recommended Videos

This makes it similar to the iPhone 7 Plus’s camera setup, and like Apple’s phone, the Xiaomi Mi 5X takes “portrait” photos where the background around the in-focus subject gets blurred out. This, along with dual-lens cameras, have become main smartphone features over the past year, with Huawei, Honor, and other brands all introducing something very similar. Xiaomi has also experimented with dual-lens cameras in the past, including on the Redmi Pro.

Otherwise, the Mi 5X is what we’d expect a 2017 midrange Android phone to be. It has a 5.5-inch, 1,920 x 1,080 pixel screen with a 2.5D curved piece of glass over the top, and a Snapdragon 625 processor with 4GB of RAM provides the power. It has 64GB of storage, a MicroSD card slot, a 5-megapixel selfie camera, a fingerprint sensor on the back, and an all-aluminum body in black, gold, or rose gold. A 3,000mAh battery stores the energy, and Android 7.0 with MIUI 8 is the operating system.

Xiaomi will update the Mi 5X and other phones in its range with MIUI 9 in the near future. The latest version of Xiaomi’s user interface gets a smart assistant, further system optimization, quicker app launch times, and a new app launcher. Initially it will only be available in China, and an international version will follow in the future.

The Xiaomi Mi 5X will cost the local equivalent of about $220 when it goes on sale in August, when it should help Xiaomi’s renewed attack on China’s smartphone market. Data from research firm Canalys shows Xiaomi has now taken back fourth place in China from Apple, and amassed 15 million phone sales over the last three months. It still trails Vivo, Oppo, and Huawei.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
Google’s new AI reply system could make texting feel easier
Soon you’ll only need one tap to pretend you typed a thoughtful reply
google pixel showing phone app

Google appears to be experimenting with a new AI feature inside Google Messages that could make replying to texts significantly faster. The feature, currently spotted in development, introduces a “tap to draft” system that automatically generates longer and more contextual responses instead of the short smart replies users are already familiar with.

According to a report by 9to5Google, the upcoming functionality expands Google Messages’ existing Smart Reply system by allowing users to tap suggested prompts that instantly create full draft responses inside a conversation. Rather than replying with simple one-word or one-line answers like “Sounds good” or “Thanks,” the new feature appears designed to generate more natural, conversational replies that users can edit before sending.

Read more
Right to repair isn’t a hobbyist crusade. It’s a fight over ownership
A dying battery should not turn a paid-off device into company property again.
Repairing computers

The least sexy part of modern gadget design might also be the most revealing: the battery you’re not supposed to replace.

I understand the official story. Sealed phones look cleaner, feel slimmer, and can survive the kind of splash that ruins your week. Adhesives help make that possible, which is the respectable version of the argument. Nobody wants a flagship phone with the structural elegance of a TV remote from 2006.

Read more
The post-warranty graveyard is filling up with working gadgets
The hardware still works. The problem is that companies increasingly decide when the software stops letting it matter.
Samsung galaxy S24 Ultra display.

I reluctantly upgraded from my Pixel 4a in late 2024, which means I spent four years clinging to a phone that still felt like a phone. Part of that was the size. The Pixel 4a was small enough to use without performing thumb yoga, a disappearing luxury now that flagships have settled into pocket-tablet territory. That’s an argument for another day.

The uglier issue is what happened after I moved on. In January 2025, Google pushed an automatic Android 13 update to Pixel 4a phones. Google’s own support page says the update reduced available battery capacity and affected charging performance on some impacted devices. Reddit users were less polite. One r/Pixel4a post said the battery suddenly had “around 40% of its former capacity” after the patch.

Read more