Xiaomi Mi 5 review: This is how you build a flagship phone
I’ve been itching to try the Mi 5 ever since Xiaomi
first unveiled its flagship for 2016 at Mobile World Congress in
Barcelona in February. When I got a chance to take a closer, but brief
look at it at the press event, it seemed to check all the boxes for what
a smartphone should have, both inside and out.
Now that it’s available in India at Rs. 24,999 ($376) – less than half of the Samsung Galaxy S7’s
asking price, the Mi 5 seems like an incredibly intriguing proposition
given its specifications and feature set. I put the phone through its
paces over the past few weeks to see if it lived to its promise of
delivering flagship-level performance at a reasonable price.
The smartphone market has been saturated with oversized 5.5-inch devices
over the past few years. Smaller options have rarely come with all the
specifications and features of flagships, and the Mi 5 is a pleasant
surprise.
The Mi 5 is not only smaller than most of its competition but also
significantly lighter, weighing in at just 129g. For comparison, the
Samsung Galaxy S7 comes in at 152g and the HTC 10
weighs 161g. The difference may not seem like much, but it certainly
counts when you’re holding the phone over an extended period of time.
Both the top and bottom bezel are fairly slim, which is notable
considering the Mi 5 features a fingerprint sensor on the front. As
seems to be the trend these days, the ultra-minimalist hardware menu and
back buttons – which are just two tiny of dots of light – are hidden
from view until activated.
The sides of the handset are fairly similar to those of the Galaxy
S7, tapering inward with beautiful lines that I frequently caught myself
gawking at.
The back of the 32GB model features what Xiaomi calls 3D glass, which
makes the colored surface and rear camera look like they’re encased in a
transparent resin. It looks gorgeous but the entirely smooth finish
lets the phone slide around on tables (and off them) rather easily.
That isn’t to say that the phone is hard to grip – its diminutive
profile and contoured sides allow it to fit comfortably in your hand.
The only design element I’m not a fan of on this device is the
reflective Mi badge on the top left corner of the front panel. It’s
glossy and draws attention away from the otherwise clean layout. I wish
Xiaomi just stuck with a single logo on the rear panel with this one.
Display and sound
The Mi 5 features a splendid 1080p full HD display that gets bright
enough for use out in the sun, and you can also turn it down to save
power.
Xiaomi says the Mi 5 features the company’s brightest-ever display,
thanks to a higher number of LED lights than other screens of the same
size. It also boasts high contrast and accurate colors, and guess what?
It delivers.
Xiaomi says it’s already baked in power-saving functionality that’s
available in Android 6.0, which means that when you’re not using your
phone, it’s in a sort of sleep mode that only lets high-priority apps
receive notifications. This certainly helps the Mi 5’s battery last
through a whole day without any fuss.
It’s also worth noting that MIUI 8 is scheduled to drop on May 10,
and is likely to come to the Mi 5, given that it’s a flagship device.
Camera and video
The Mi 5 comes with an impressive 16-megapixel Sony
camera with an f/2.0 aperture. It’s protected from scratches by
Sapphire glass and features four-axis optical image stabilization to
combat shakiness when shooting.
The camera performs well in brightly-lit conditions and delivers
sharp, colorful shots. The aperture is wide enough to allow a good
amount of depth-of-field, so as to separate subjects in the foreground from the background.
However, it doesn’t do nearly as well in low light. As with cameras
on less expensive phones, it struggles to balance colors or eke out much
detail, and photos turn out fairly noisy.
Performance
Xiaomi has made only the 32GB variant of the Mi 5 available in India,
and that’s what I’ve been testing over the past few weeks. It’s powered
by a Snapdragon 820 quad-core 1.8GHz processor paired with an Adreno
530 GPU and 3GB RAM.
It’s hard to slow this beast down – you can throw any number of apps
or graphics-intensive games at it, and it won’t skip a beat. Images, Web
pages and games all load quickly and multitasking is a breeze.
That being said, it isn’t significantly quicker than the $150 Redmi
Note 3 – unless you’re constantly looking for differences in speed, it’s
hard to notice that the Mi 5 is the better performer. That’s not a
knock on how it fares, but it’s worth noting that we’re fast approaching
a point where Android device specifications cease to matter a whole
lot.
Verdict
The Mi 5 is a solid performer in just about every department, looks
fantastic and comes packed with features. And at just Rs. 24,999 ($376)
it beats other flagships from LG and Samsung on price by a mile
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