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Rumors about Xiaomi Redmi's top phone

Rumors about Xiaomi Redmi's top phone

We don’t have to sleep much anymore until official data comes, but in the meantime, let’s take a look at what we can take for granted.

Rumors about Xiaomi Redmi's top phone

That the central unit, at least in the more powerful model of the Snapdragon 855 will be almost certainly known. The name has also been in question for a long time, but the K20 and K20 Pro now seem almost certain to run. In terms of memory and storage, we can find 6GB + 64GB, 6GB + 128GB, 8 GB + 128 GB, 8 GB + 256 GB RAM / storage builds. The housing will be available in Carbon Fiber Black, Glacier Blue and Flame Red on both phones.

REDMI K20 PRO

With the Pro version, we know it’s going to be a huge, frameless mobile with a display diagonal of 6,39 inches, the resolution is of course FHD +. The battery will have a capacity of 3600 mAh, for which we will also get a quick charge, namely 27 watts. Not to be missed is the fingerprint reader under the glass, and interestingly, the infrared as well. The latter is one of the most popular features of Redmi phones, but it is not usually used in top phones these days (unfortunately), so the K20 Pro will be special in this respect as well.

redmipro2

What is most special, however, is the camera, more specifically the cameras. As you would expect from a state-of-the-art device today, three lenses will peek on the back. These will be expected in the usual layout, i.e. we can work with a telephoto, a traditional and a wide angle camera. What’s really weird about it, though, won’t be this, it’s the self-timer camera, which no longer takes up a single millimeter of the display. You don’t get the sliding front panel you’ve seen with the MIX 3, but a periscope camera that protrudes from the top. Now we know that it has a 20 megapixel sensor in it.

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Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.