Charge in a hurry after the remaining charge is in the single digits. Oh, right now, revive the battery!
I think all of us have had the experience of plugging a charging cable into a smartphone and just watching the battery charge up. So all mankind should be interested in Xiaomi's new fast charging technology.
Xiaomi's new high-speed charging technology called HyperCharge has broken world records for both wired and wireless charging. Take a look at the video posted by Xiaomi on Twitter.
Charge up to 100% in just 8 minutes using wired charging and 15 minutes wirelessly! #XiaomiHyperChargeToo good to be true? Check out the timer yourself! #InnovationForEveryonepic.twitter.com/muBTPkRchl
— Xiaomi (@Xiaomi) May 31, 2021Haha!
This video shows how the Xiaomi Mi 11 Pro with a customized 4,000mAh battery is fully charged in just 8 minutes with Xiaomi's 200W wired charger. It can be charged to 10% in 44 seconds and 50% in 3 minutes. very.
In addition, the same "Xiami Mi 11 Pro" as above can be wirelessly charged with a 120W charger. 10% charge in 1 minute, 50% charge in 7 minutes, and full charge in just 15 minutes.
If this video doesn't lie or exaggerate, Xiaomi's new wired charging speeds beat competitor OPPO's "flash charge" technology. Last year, OPPO launched a 125W wired charger with this technology, which was described as "the latest breakthrough" in the mobile industry. According to XDA Developers, Xiaomi and OPPO have been competing with each other in the charging speed competition for smartphones for the past few years, but it seems that Xiaomi has again led by a large margin.
But don't expect too much.
According to XDA Developers, it seems that this HyperCharge technology is still a long way from reaching consumers (by the way, Xiaomi doesn't sell it in the US, but it does in Japan). And while they may have wanted to show off their charging tech early on, Xiaomi doesn't always offer the fastest chargers that work with real phones.
Furthermore, this kind of ultra-fast charging technology is usually reserved for certain smartphone makers via chargers and cables, and won't be mainstream for some time. So the day when iPhones can fast charge so fast isn't coming soon, maybe.