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Flagship Chip, Price $110 Lower — But Only for China for Now

Redmi K Pad launches with a processor at the level of flagship smartphones of 2025 and a display that technically surpasses iPad mini in every parameter. However, a global launch has not yet been confirmed.

Oleg Bazylewicz

By Oleg Bazylewicz

April 8, 2026 · 2 min read

Flagship Chip, Price $110 Lower — But Only for China for Now
Redmi K Pad 2 (Фото: Xiaomi)

On June 26, 2025, Xiaomi released the Redmi K Pad — a compact tablet with an 8.8-inch screen that is openly positioned as an alternative to the Apple iPad mini 7th generation. The comparison turned out to be no marketing trick: on paper, the Android device wins in almost every technical aspect.

Processor No Worse Than a Flagship Smartphone

Performance is handled by the MediaTek Dimensity 9400+ on a 3nm process with an eight-core CPU (up to 3.73 GHz) and Immortalis-G925 graphics. As GadgetMatch notes, this is the same chip found in top 2025 smartphones — vivo X200s and OPPO Find X8s. The iPad mini 7, meanwhile, uses Apple's A17 Pro — the same one found in the iPhone 15 Pro from 2023.

RAM — up to 16 GB, UFS 4.1 storage — up to 1 TB. Cooling is provided by an aluminum vapor chamber with an area of 12,050 mm², which, according to the manufacturer, reduces temperature under load by 25°C.

Display: 165 Hz vs 60 Hz

8.8-inch IPS LCD with 1880×3008 resolution (~403 ppi), support for Dolby Vision, HDR Vivid, and peak brightness of 700 nits. For comparison, the iPad mini offers 8.3 inches, 60 Hz, and 362 ppi. The screen-to-body ratio on the Redmi K Pad is 82.9%.

"The Redmi K Pad has a larger screen but not a larger body — thanks to noticeably thinner bezels"

GadgetMatch

Battery — 9,100 mAh with 67W charging. Weight — 326g with 6.5mm thickness. Magnetic stylus support is included.

Price — The Main Argument, But With a Caveat

According to NotebookCheck, the starting price of the Redmi K Pad is expected to be around CNY 3,199 (~$445), while the iPad mini 7 in China costs CNY 3,999 (~$557). The difference is $112 at the start, and with better specifications on paper.

  • Camera: 13 MP with PDAF and 4K video / 8 MP front camera
  • OS: Android 15 + HyperOS 2
  • Memory: 8/256 GB — 16/1 TB, no microSD slot
  • Colors: Smoky Purple, Deep Black, Spruce Green

Where the Catch Is

The Redmi K Pad is currently officially available only in China — Xiaomi has not confirmed a global release. The iPad mini, despite losing in specifications, offers the Apple ecosystem, guaranteed iOS updates for years to come, and compatibility with Apple Pencil. For users outside mainland China, the device currently exists only as a "technical proposal."

If Xiaomi does announce a global launch by the end of 2025 — and maintains at least an $80–100 price difference — the compact tablet segment will face real competition for the first time in several years. The question is whether the company is ready for a battle beyond its home market.

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EU Against Google: Why the Latest Fine Could Change More Than Previous Ones

# European Regulators Target Google Again — This Time Over Digital Markets Act Violations. What's Behind the Accusations and Why It Matters Beyond the Corporation European regulators have renewed their scrutiny of Google, this time focusing on alleged violations of the Digital Markets Act. The charges underscore Brussels' increasingly aggressive stance on big tech monopolies and what officials say are anticompetitive practices. The accusations center on how Google leverages its dominance across multiple digital services — from search to advertising to mobile platforms — to disadvantage competitors. Regulators claim the company is using its market power in ways that stifle innovation and limit consumer choice. The case carries significance far beyond Google itself. It signals how the EU is attempting to enforce its landmark Digital Markets Act, legislation designed to curb the gatekeeping power of tech giants. A potential penalty could set precedent for how other large technology companies face similar scrutiny. For consumers and smaller tech firms, the outcome could reshape the digital landscape by creating more room for competition. For Google, fines and operational restrictions could fundamentally alter its business model in Europe, the world's most stringent regulatory market. The case also reflects a broader geopolitical divide, with the EU pursuing a regulatory approach that contrasts sharply with the lighter-touch oversight favored in the United States.

May 26, 2026