This is a very useful product.After taking the smartphone world by storm, Xiaomi is trying to repeat its success where tablets are concerned. Weve been almost universally impressed by what the Chinese company has managed to produce given the prices it charges, and the rest of the industry has had to scramble to match this new competitive force. As customers and compulsive bargain hunters ourselves, Xiaomi has brought nothing but good news this past year.
Recent launches havent had as much of an impact as the first few did, but thats set to change again with the new pad. While there are plenty of android tablets in this price range already, the company is promising high-end features and the kind of quality that competitors do not deliver in particular, stands out as the prime target - not the horde Android manufacturers offering oversized phones.
Xiaomis biggest constraint has been its strategy of hosting weekly online flash sales, which might be great for generating some initial buzz, but only result in. Thankfully, the Mi Pad without any such hassle. Lets see how the company adapts to this new territory.
In terms of its overall size and dimensions, the Mi Pad has a lot in common with Apples ipad mini There is no mistaking one for the other though, as the Mi Pad is all glossy plastic. Xiaomi says it has used magnesium alloy in the construction of the Mi Pad, but you wouldnt know by looking at it. The shell isnt removable and so the battery is sealed in. Theres a microSD card tray on the left side and the power and volume buttons are on the right. The 3.5mm headset socket is on top and the Micro-USB port is on the bottom.
Theres an almost distractingly reflective Mi logo in the upper left corner, above the screen. You can see a camera cutout in the centre,
Despite Xiaomis promotional materials prominently showing the Mi Pad in a variety of colours it will only be available in white when it goes on sale in India. Maybe the other options will be available later. While the front face is black, the white rear shell wraps around and an outline is visible when looking at the Mi Pad head-on. The rear is glossy and extremely slick, unlike the Redmi 2s matte texture, and we did feel the device slip from our hands more than once.
The most interesting line on the Mi Pads spec sheet is the SoC description. This is one of the only shipping products in the world that uses Nvidias Tegra K1 SoC. Nvidia launched the Tegra K1 with much fanfare in early 2014 but it just never took off in the way that the company had hoped. Despite promising benchmark numbers and arguably superior graphics performance, phone and tablet manufacturers just did not launch a lot of Tegra-based products last year.