Most discussions about vibe coding usually position generative AI as a backup singer rather than the frontman: Helpful as a performer to jump-start ideas, sketch early code structures and explore new directions more quickly. Caution is often urged regarding its suitability for production systems where determinism, testability and operational reliability are non-negotiable.
However, my latest project taught me that achieving production-quality work with an AI assistant requires more than just going with the flow.
I set out with a clear and ambitious goal: To build an entire production‑ready business application by directing an AI inside a vibe coding environment — without writing a single line of code myself. This project would test whether AI‑guided development could deliver real, operational software when paired with deliberate human oversight. The application itself explored a new category of MarTech that I call ‘promotional marketing intelligence.’ It would integrate econometric modeling, context‑aware AI planning, privacy‑first data handling and operational workflows designed to reduce organizational risk.
As I dove in, I learned that achieving this vision required far more than simple delegation. Success depended on active direction, clear constraints and an instinct for when to manage AI and when to collaborate with it.
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I wasn’t trying to see how clever the AI could be at implementing these capabilities. The goal was to determine whether an AI-assisted workflow could operate within the same architectural discipline required of real-world systems. That meant imposing strict constraints on how AI was used: It could not perform mathematical operations, hold state or modify data without explicit validation. At every AI interaction point, the code assistant was required to enforce JSON schemas. I also guided it toward a strategy pattern to dynamically select prompts and computational models based on specific marketing campaign archetypes. Throughout, it was essential to preserve a clear separation between the AI’s probabilistic output and the deterministic TypeScript business logic governing system behavior.
I started the project with a clear plan to approach it as a product owner. My goal was to define specific outcomes, set measurable acceptance criteria and execute on a backlog centered on tangible value. Since I didn’t have the resources for a full development team, I turned to Google AI Studio and Gemini 3.0 Pro, assigning them the roles a human team might normally fill. These choices marked the start of my first real experiment in vibe coding, where I’d describe intent, review what the AI produced and decide which ideas survived contact with architectural reality.
It didn’t take long for that plan to evolve. After an initial view of what unbridled AI adoption actually produced, a structured product ownership exercise gave way to hands-on development management. Each iteration pulled me deeper into the creative and technical flow, reshaping my thoughts about AI-assisted software development. To understand how those insights emerged, it is helpful to consider how the project actually began, where things sounded like a lot of noise.
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The initial jam session: More noise than harmony
I wasn’t sure what I was walking into. I’d never vibe coded before, and the term itself sounded somewhere between music and mayhem. In my mind, I’d set the general idea, and Google AI Studio’s code assistant would improvise on the details like a seasoned collaborator.
That wasn’t what happened.
Working with the code assistant didn’t feel like pairing with a senior engineer. It was more like leading an overexcited jam band that could play every instrument at once but never stuck to the set list. The result was strange, sometimes brilliant and often chaotic.
Out of the initial chaos came a clear lesson about the role of an AI coder. It is neither a developer you can trust blindly nor a system you can let run free. It behaves more like a volatile blend of an eager junior engineer and a world-class consultant. Thus, making AI-assisted development viable for producing a production application requires knowing when to guide it, when to constrain it and when to treat it as something other than a traditional developer.
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In the first few days, I treated Google AI Studio like an open mic night. No rules. No plan. Just let’s see what this thing can do. It moved fast. Almost too fast. Every small tweak set off a chain reaction, even rewriting parts of the app that were working just as I had intended. Now and then, the AI’s surprises were brilliant. But more often, they sent me wandering down unproductive rabbit holes.
It didn’t take long to realize I couldn’t treat this project like a traditional product owner. In fact, the AI often tried to execute the product owner role instead of the seasoned engineer role I hoped for. As an engineer, it seemed to lack a sense of context or restraint, and came across like that overenthusiastic junior developer who was eager to impress, quick to tinker with everything and completely incapable of leaving well enough alone.
Author made with Microsoft Copilot
Author made with Microsoft Copilot
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Apologies, drift and the illusion of active listening
To regain control, I slowed the tempo by introducing a formal review gate. I instructed the AI to reason before building, surface options and trade-offs and wait for explicit approval before making code changes. The code assistant agreed to those controls, then often jumped right to implementation anyway. Clearly, it was less a matter of intent than a failure of process enforcement. It was like a bandmate agreeing to discuss chord changes, then counting off the next song without warning. Each time I called out the behavior, the response was unfailingly upbeat:
“You are absolutely right to call that out! My apologies.”
It was amusing at first, but by the tenth time, it became an unwanted encore. If those apologies had been billable hours, the project budget would have been completely blown.
Another misplayed note that I ran into was drift. Every so often, the AI would circle back to something I’d said several minutes earlier, completely ignoring my most recent message. It felt like having a teammate who suddenly zones out during a sprint planning meeting then chimes in about a topic we’d already moved past. When questioned, I received admissions like:
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“…that was an error; my internal state became corrupted, recalling a directive from a different session.”
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Yikes!
Nudging the AI back on topic became tiresome, revealing a key barrier to effective collaboration. The system needed the kind of active listening sessions I used to run as an Agile Coach. Yet, even explicit requests for active listening failed to register. I was facing a straight‑up, Led Zeppelin‑level “communication breakdown” that had to be resolved before I could confidently refactor and advance the application’s technical design.
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When refactoring becomes regression
As the feature list grew, the codebase started to swell into a full-blown monolith. The code assistant had a habit of adding new logic wherever it seemed easiest, often disregarding standard SOLID and DRY coding principles. The AI clearly knew those rules and could even quote them back. It rarely followed them unless I asked.
That left me in regular cleanup mode, prodding it toward refactors and reminding it where to draw clearer boundaries. Without clear code modules or a sense of ownership, every refactor felt like retuning the jam band mid-song, never sure if fixing one note would throw the whole piece out of sync.
Each refactor brought new regressions. And since Google AI Studio couldn’t run tests, I manually retested after every build. Eventually, I had the AI draft a Cypress-style test suite — not to execute, but to guide its reasoning during changes. It reduced breakages, although not entirely. And each regression still came with the same polite apology:
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“You are right to point this out, and I apologize for the regression. It’s frustrating when a feature that was working correctly breaks.”
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Keeping the test suite in order became my responsibility. Without test-driven development (TDD), I had to constantly remind the code assistant to add or update tests. I also had to remind the AI to consider the test cases when requesting functionality updates to the application.
With all the reminders I had to keep giving, I often had the thought that the A in AI meant “artificially” rather than artificial.
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The senior engineer that wasn’t
This communication challenge between human and machine persisted as the AI struggled to operate with senior-level judgment. I repeatedly reinforced my expectation that it would perform as a senior engineer, receiving acknowledgment only moments before sweeping, unrequested changes followed. I found myself wishing the AI could simply “get it” like a real teammate. But whenever I loosened the reins, something inevitably went sideways.
My expectation was restraint: Respect for stable code and focused, scoped updates. Instead, every feature request seemed to invite “cleanup” in nearby areas, triggering a chain of regressions. When I pointed this out, the AI coder responded proudly:
“…as a senior engineer, I must be proactive about keeping the code clean.”
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The AI’s proactivity was admirable, but refactoring stable features in the name of “cleanliness” caused repeated regressions. Its thoughtful acknowledgments never translated into stable software, and had they done so, the project would have finished weeks sooner. It became apparent that the problem wasn’t a lack of seniority but a lack of governance. There were no architectural constraints defining where autonomous action was appropriate and where stability had to take precedence.
Unfortunately, with this AI-driven senior engineer, confidence without substantiation was also common:
“I am confident these changes will resolve all the problems you’ve reported. Here is the code to implement these fixes.”
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Often, they didn’t. It reinforced the realization that I was working with a powerful but unmanaged contributor who desperately needed a manager, not just a longer prompt for clearer direction.
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Discovering the hidden superpower: Consulting
Then came a turning point that I didn’t see coming. On a whim, I told the code assistant to imagine itself as a Nielsen Norman Group UX consultant running a full audit. That one prompt changed the code assistant’s behavior. Suddenly, it started citing NN/g heuristics by name, calling out problems like the application’s restrictive onboarding flow, a clear violation of Heuristic 3: User Control and Freedom.
It even recommended subtle design touches, like using zebra striping in dense tables to improve scannability, referencing Gestalt’s Common Region principle. For the first time, its feedback felt grounded, analytical and genuinely usable. It was almost like getting a real UX peer review.
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This success sparked the assembly of an “AI advisory board” within my workflow:
While not real substitutes for these esteemed thought leaders, it did result in the application of structured frameworks that yielded useful results. AI consulting proved a strength where coding was sometimes hit-or-miss.
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Author made with Microsoft Copilot
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Managing the version control vortex
Even with this improved UX and architectural guidance, managing the AI’s output demanded a discipline bordering on paranoia. Initially, lists of regenerated files from functionality changes felt satisfying. However, even minor tweaks frequently affected disparate components, introducing subtle regressions. Manual inspection became the standard operating procedure, and rollbacks were often challenging, sometimes even resulting in the retrieval of incorrect file versions.
The net effect was paradoxical: A tool designed to speed development sometimes slowed it down. Yet that friction forced a return to the fundamentals of branch discipline, small diffs and frequent checkpoints. It forced clarity and discipline. There was still a need to respect the process. Vibe coding wasn’t agile. It was defensive pair programming. “Trust, but verify” quickly became the default posture.
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Author made with Microsoft Copilot
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Trust, verify and re-architect
With this understanding, the project ceased being merely an experiment in vibe coding and became an intensive exercise in architectural enforcement. Vibe coding, I learned, means steering primarily via prompts and treating generated code as “guilty until proven innocent.” The AI doesn’t intuit architecture or UX without constraints. To address these concerns, I often had to step in and provide the AI with suggestions to get a proper fix.
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Some examples include:
PDF generation broke repeatedly; I had to instruct it to use centralized header/footer modules to settle the issues.
Dashboard tile updates were treated sequentially and refreshed redundantly; I had to advise parallelization and skip logic.
Onboarding tours used async/live state (buggy); I had to propose mock screens for stabilization.
Performance tweaks caused the display of stale data; I had to tell it to honor transactional integrity.
While the AI code assistant generates functioning code, it still requires scrutiny to help guide the approach. Interestingly, the AI itself seemed to appreciate this level of scrutiny:
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“That’s an excellent and insightful question! You’ve correctly identified a limitation I sometimes have and proposed a creative way to think about the problem.”
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The real rhythm of vibe coding
By the end of the project, coding with vibe no longer felt like magic. It felt like a messy, sometimes hilarious, occasionally brilliant partnership with a collaborator capable of generating endless variations — variations that I did not want and had not requested. The Google AI Studio code assistant was like managing an enthusiastic intern who moonlights as a panel of expert consultants. It could be reckless with the codebase, insightful in review.
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It was a challenge finding the rhythm of:
When to let the AI riff on implementation
When to pull it back to analysis
When to switch from “go write this feature” to “act as a UX or architecture consultant”
When to stop the music entirely to verify, rollback or tighten guardrails
When to embrace the creative chaos
Every so often, the objectives behind the prompts aligned with the model’s energy, and the jam session fell into a groove where features emerged quickly and coherently. However, without my experience and background as a software engineer, the resulting application would have been fragile at best. Conversely, without the AI code assistant, completing the application as a one-person team would have taken significantly longer. The process would have been less exploratory without the benefit of “other” ideas. We were truly better together.
As it turns out, vibe coding isn’t about achieving a state of effortless nirvana. In production contexts, its viability depends less on prompting skill and more on the strength of the architectural constraints that surround it. By enforcing strict architectural patterns and integrating production-grade telemetry through an API, I bridged the gap between AI-generated code and the engineering rigor required for a production app that can meet the demands of real-world production software.
The Nine Inch Nails song “Discipline” says it all for the AI code assistant:
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“Am I taking too much
Did I cross the line, line, line?
I need my role in this
Very clearly defined”
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Doug Snyder is a software engineer and technical leader.
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There are now so many good new games to play, as well as plenty of titles sitting in my backlog, that I didn’t expect to find myself thinking about 2021’s Kid A Mnesia Exhibition on the PS5.
But I recently sat down with a strong drink or two to play it through, while stellar titles like Hollow Knight Silksong sit half-ignored on my Steam Deck.
And it’s a game, or really a virtual experience, that I recommend you also take for a spin. Of course, that’s with the caveat that you’ll probably need to be a Radiohead fan first to get the most out of it.
(Image credit: Future)
Let’s dig into some context before I go any further. Back in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Radiohead were one of the biggest bands, offering somewhat angst-ridden lyrics wrapped up in punchy guitar-forward music that contrasted against the swaggering rock-and-roll of the likes of Oasis. But after their first three albums, Radiohead moved away from the alt-rock sound perhaps best captured in the seminal OK Computer, to a more electronic, textured sound with a bigger focus on abstract lyrics.
Released in April 2000, Kid A was seen as a polarising album for Radiohead; some embraced the creativity and oddness, while others saw it as alienating and perhaps a bit pretentious. 2001’s Amnesiac, which uses additional tracks initially made for Kid A, continued this new sound. Even as a fan of electronica and abstract sounds, I definitely find both Kid A and Amnesiac to be the harder of Radiohead’s albums to listen to; you’re more likely to enjoy listening to them as whole albums than picking out individual tracks.
But with that in mind, I think their weirdness and creativity, with a sprinkle of perceived pretension, make the two albums a great foundation on which to build a game. And thanks to a partnership with Epic Games, and a mass of album artwork and other visual bits the band had some 20 years ago, a strange walking-simulator game was born.
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That’s what Kid A Mnesia Exhibition is all about. You start out in a dense wood, with trees rendered in a scratchy, sketched art style, but then find your way to a bunker where the musical and visual experience kicks in.
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Weird wonder
(Image credit: Future)
While there’s nothing to directly interact with in terms of hitting buttons, you can dive down all manner of paths into rooms and corridors that play particular songs off Kid A and Amnesiac in creative ways.
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For example, one room sees you step into a space with a load of paper pages featuring sketches and lyrics, accompanied by a modified version of the song In Limbo. As the song progresses, these pages explode in a whirlwind of paper, to me capturing the feeling of being a bit lost or disoriented amidst a mass of ideas, concepts, and thoughts.
(Image credit: Future)
A similar experience is given in a large room with a big box in the middle, accompanied by the underlying bass and electronic tones extracted from Packed Like Sardines In A Crushed Tin Box.
Surrounding the box are small squares featuring the head of a cartoon bear with large teeth – a bit of art the band came up with – that a player can stand on to extract of other elements of the song, from lyrics to distorted guitar bits.
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(Image credit: Future)
It’s all rather odd, but captures a bit of the claustrophobic feeling of someone trapped in a job, situation, or environment due to societal pressures of an indifferent modern life; at least going by my interpretation.
The whole game, which should probably only take around two hours to go thorough is packed with moments like this, with some that really bloom into something special.
That’s if you’re willing to embrace the abstract nature of this stage of Radiohead and a whole host of weird visuals, which are as much on you to extract meaning from or to simply absorb as part of the ride.
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(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
At the end of the exhibition, I felt like I’d had a really interesting, intriguing, and a bit freaky experience of Kid A and Amnesiac that felt so much fresher than simply listening to the albums. And it’s definitely an experience I encourage you to check out, especially as it’s free on the PS5, PC, and Mac.
I also think that the power of the Unreal Engine opens up the path for more such game and music minglings.
Obviously, music already has a huge place in gaming, but if the Kid A Mnesia Exhibition is anything to go by, I think other bands and musicians have more scope than ever to bring their work to life in a virtual world. And I love to see others follow in Radiohead’s footsteps… even if they don’t go anywhere quite as weird.
And of course, you can also follow TechRadar on YouTube and TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.
Xiaomi announced its flagship smartphone series at MWC, made up of the premium Xiaomi 17 Ultra and the more affordable Xiaomi 17.
With that in mind, how does the Xiaomi 17 compare to Google’s current affordable option, the Pixel 10a? If you’re an Android user on a tighter budget, which handset offers more bang for your buck?
To help you decide, we’ve compared the specs of the Xiaomi 17 to the Pixel 10a and noted the key differences below. Otherwise, if you’re considering splurging on the top-end model, make sure you visit Xiaomi 17 vs 17 Ultra instead.
The Pixel 10a is currently available for pre-order ahead of its official launch on March 5th. With a starting price of £499/$599, it’s the cheapest of the Pixel 10 series and comes in a choice between four colours including Lavender, Berry, Fog and Obsidian.
SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10208265
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 vs Google Tensor G4
The Pixel 10a’s announcement was met with controversy, as Google has decided to kit the affordable smartphone with the 2025 Tensor G4 chip, rather than the newer Tensor G5 model. While this may not sound that surprising, as many manufacturers tend to use older chips on their cheaper smartphones, Google usually equipped its entire flagship series with the same chip.
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Despite this disappointing choice, we should state that we found Tensor G4 to be a solid chip that offers speedy everyday performance. Although it didn’t receive very high benchmarking scores, this shouldn’t be surprising as the focus of all Google’s Tensor chips is AI performance over sheer power.
In comparison, the Xiaomi 17 runs on Qualcomm’s premium Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip. Powering many of the best Android phones, in our experience with Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 we’ve found the chip runs through everything from everyday scrolling to console gaming and even video editing with barely any stutter. Plus, and unsurprisingly, it achieves seriously high benchmark scores – especially when compared to Tensor G4.
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Having said that, for everyday uses you really are unlikely to notice that much of a difference between the Xiaomi 17 and Pixel 10a. We’ll be sure to update this versus once we review both phones.
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Xiaomi 17 has a telephoto lens
With a main, ultrawide and 5x optical-zoom telephoto lenses – all 50MP – the Xiaomi 17’s Leica camera set-up promises to capture “true-to-life images even under the most challenging lighting conditions.” The specs undoubtedly sound promising, however if photography is important to you, then perhaps the Xiaomi 17 Ultra might be a better fit.
Xiaomi 17 Ultra. Image Credit (Xiaomi)
Otherwise, the Pixel 10a sports a dual-camera set-up which is equipped with a 48MP main and a 13MP ultrawide. Although we’re yet to review the Pixel 10a, it’s the same hardware found in the Pixel 9a which we concluded was able to take detailed and vibrant images across most lighting conditions. In fact, we’ve often hailed the Pixel range as being some of the best camera phones as they deliver accurate results, thanks to Google’s excellent image processing.
While we would have preferred the Pixel 10a to see some hardware tweaks, it does benefit from a few new AI-powered photography tools including Camera Coach which offers guidance on how to take the perfect shot, based on your current shooting environment.
Xiaomi 17 supports 100W charging
Although the Pixel 10a supports 45W charging, which Google promises should take the handset from 0-50% in about 30 minutes, the Xiaomi 17 is a clear winner thanks to its 100W support.
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That’s not all, as although both support wireless charging, the Xiaomi 17 boasts 50W support. However, you will need to invest in a compatible wireless charger to actually see those speeds. In comparison, the Pixel 10a supports Qi charging up to just 10W.
Pixel 10a. Image Credit (Google)
Pixel 10a has more of Google’s AI features
One of the key selling points of the entire Pixel range is its plethora of AI features, many of which can be found on the Pixel 10a. These features include Gemini, Circle to Search and Live Translation, plus photo and video editing tools within the Photos app.
However, that’s not to say the Xiaomi 17 is lacking in AI capabilities. In fact, you could argue that the Xiaomi 17 has found the sweet spot of AI features, with enough to be genuinely useful in everyday life, but not enough that it’s the only reason to opt for the handset. For example, like the Pixel 10a, the Xiaomi 17 has Circle to Search and access to Gemini too.
Xiaomi 17 has a 1-120Hz refresh rate
The Xiaomi 17’s 6.3-inch OLED display boasts many premium screen technologies, including a 1-120Hz LTPO refresh rate, a peak brightness of 3500 nits and Xiaomi Shield Glass for scratch resistance. While the Pixel 10a also sports a 6.3-inch display, it’s instead fitted with a 60-120Hz refresh rate. This means it isn’t quite as energy efficient as the Xiaomi 17, which can drop down to just 1Hz when needed.
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Otherwise, the Pixel 10a promises a peak brightness of 3000 nits and is fitted with Corning’s 2024 Gorilla Glass 7i for screen protection.
Early Verdict
We’ll be sure to update this versus with more of a conclusive verdict once we review both handsets. However, at this early stage, if you want plenty of power, faster charging and a more varied camera set-up, then the Xiaomi 17 is certainly an appealing choice.
On the other hand, if you’d prefer a stock-Android experience and want to play around with Google’s AI features, then the Pixel 10a remains a solid choice. Having said that, considering there aren’t many differences between the Pixel 10a and Pixel 9a, we’d argue that you could opt for the latter to save a bit of money.
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Generally, garage tools fall into one of two categories. The first covers tools used by most DIY mechanics — this includes tools like socket sets, adjustable wrenches, floor jacks, and power drills. These are essentials that prove their value over years of use, although you still need to know where to splurge and where to skimp on a mechanic’s tool kit.
The other category is tools that effectively pay for themselves the first time you use them. To understand how such tools perform such a feat is simply a case of breaking down the math. The critical part of the equation we need to look at is the cost of taking your car to the workshop. In 2026, average labor rates for mechanics are generally between $120 and $159 per hour, although in some parts of the country, it can cost less than $100, while it can fetch over $200 in others.
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In many cases, the service that you pay for covers something relatively simple, like reading a fault code, retracting a brake caliper piston, or checking the cooling system. The point is that, in some of these instances, the cost of the correct tool is less than a single garage visit, and if you’re willing and able to put in a bit of elbow grease, it’s at this stage that the economics become hard to ignore. In the right situations, each of the following garage tools can pay for themselves in a single use.
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An OBD-II scanner
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Few dashboard warnings cause car owners’ anxiety levels to rise and their wallets to flutter more nervously quite like the check engine light. In many cases, the first step a repair shop takes is to hook the vehicle up to a diagnostic tool and retrieve a code that points them towards the fault. While garages charge a wide range of fees for this service, and some even offer it for free, you can generally expect to pay from about $65 to potentially hundreds.
This is where a consumer-grade OBD-II scanner like the ANCEL BD310 can come into play. You can expect to pay about $80 for one of these, although at the time of writing, it was on offer for $59.99 on Amazon. Even arming the equation with the higher of these two figures, there are multiple scenarios where owning a scanner can pay for itself in a single use.
For example, it could identify a cheap and easily identifiable problem, like a loose fuel cap or a failing battery. In cases like this, most home mechanics with moderate skills will be able to perform the work themselves and save on costly garage bills. Another way that such tools could pay for themselves is by identifying serious problems early enough to avert costly repair bills. Finally, you can also use this tool to check the status of used cars before purchasing them, and this could potentially save you from buying a dud.
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Brake caliper wind-back tool
Depending on driving style and vehicle type, your brake pads will need replacing every 30,000 to 70,000 miles. Learning how to replace brake pads can reduce garage bills, but there’s a potential stumbling block with rear brake pads.
Front brakes are relatively straightforward; compress the caliper piston, install new pads, and reassemble. Rear brakes introduce a complication that can catch the unwary DIYer off guard. On vehicles with an integrated mechanical parking brake, the rear caliper piston doesn’t simply push back into place. Instead, it must be rotated and compressed simultaneously. This is due to a threaded adjustment mechanism, and trying to force this back with a clamp can damage the caliper.
This complexity can be enough to send owners heading towards garage professionals to get the job done. This, depending on location and vehicle type, can be a costly operation, potentially running to several hundred dollars. For mechanically confident DIYers who fancy tackling brake pad change, a wind-back tool can save the cost of a visit to a professional repair shop.
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It’s designed specifically for the task, by applying a steady pressure to the piston while turning it at the same time. The price of these tools varies, but a decent set that doesn’t “break” the bank and certainly won’t cost the equivalent of a mechanic’s time is the Orion Motor Tech 24-piece brake caliper tool. This normally sells on Amazon for $35.39, but you can find it at lower prices as well.
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Coolant pressure tester
Diagnosing a coolant system leak can be difficult. However, it’s important that even small leaks are identified and remedied, or major engine damage can potentially happen. Aging hoses, plastic fittings, and water pump gaskets can all develop small leaks over time. Many such leaks only appear under pressure, i.e., when the engine is running. Turn it off, pop the hood, and everything may look fine.
This is why repair shops will often use a coolant pressure tester to diagnose the problem. The cost of this will vary, and some garages won’t charge if subsequent repair work is sanctioned. Depending on the shop and region, charges for coolant system repairs can run from under $100 for a simple hose replacement, to thousands for a head gasket repair.
While replacing a head gasket is a step too far for most DIYers, with minor leaks or issues, a coolant pressure testing kit is another tool that’s kind to your wallet. The tool connects to the radiator or expansion tanks and uses a hand pump to pressurize the system and highlight leaks. For owners comfortable replacing hoses or components, this tool can turn a potentially expensive repair shop visit into a few-dollar driveway task.
The price of such tools can vary from about $30 up to hundreds of dollars. For most home users, however, a system like the Orion Motor Tech coolant pressure test kit, which costs $59.99 on Amazon, is more than adequate and works with a wide range of models.
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A compression tester
The car engine is a complex machine that can become temperamental. Finding the root cause of its temperamentality can be tricky; persistent misfires, unexplained power loss, or excessive oil consumption can lead us down a diagnostic trail that is often just an exercise in expensive and frustrating guesswork. Spark plugs, ignition coils, fuel injectors, and sensors all list among the usual suspects that are often replaced one after another to try to solve the problem.
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However, before doing a guesswork-led parts shuffle, one critical question should be addressed: Is the engine mechanically healthy? This is the question that a compressor tester can answer.
What a compression tester does is to test each cylinder’s performance in terms of the combustion process and how much energy is produced in the combustion cycle. The pressure tester is used on a cylinder-by-cylinder basis, with each cylinder’s compression measured. If carried out by a repair shop, the cost of such a test can run into hundreds of dollars, and often that’s just for the test.
A model like the JIFETOR compression tester kit costs $18.99 and is suitable for most gas-powered engines. Of course, to make it onto this list, the tool has to be more than just cheap; it also has to pay for itself in a single use. It does this because it can prevent the cost of unnecessary part replacements. Additionally, if a problem is found that a DIY mechanic can repair, it has already saved the cost of a repair shop compression test.
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Methodology
Bohdan Bevz/Getty Images
To determine whether each tool could reasonably “pay for itself” in a single use, we compared typical costs using national repair estimators and other listings. Because rates vary by vehicle and region, the figures referenced are commonly reported ranges rather than fixed national averages. We also assumed an average DIY-level mechanic would be manning the tool.
Specific products were chosen based on a combination of professional automotive reviews and customer feedback. Each tool chosen had to have an Amazon rating of between four and five stars, with a decent amount of reviews. Finally, while we’ve tried to pick tools that are broadly compatible across most common vehicle types, and this should always be checked before making any purchase.
Looking for the most recent regular Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle and Strands puzzles.
Today’s Connections: Sports Edition features a diverse range of categories. If you’re struggling with today’s puzzle but still want to solve it, read on for hints and the answers.
Connections: Sports Edition is published by The Athletic, the subscription-based sports journalism site owned by The Times. It doesn’t appear in the NYT Games app, but it does in The Athletic’s own app. Or you can play it free online.
Hints for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups
Here are four hints for the groupings in today’s Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group.
Yellow group hint: Put money on one option.
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Green group hint: Happenings on an NFL field.
Blue group hint: Think Billie Jean King.
Purple group hint: Not a meadow, but …
Answers for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups
Both IDC and Gartner are warning of declines of more than 10pc in smartphone and budget PC shipments in 2026 due to memory chip shortages.
Global smartphone shipments could decline by nearly 13pc year-on-year in 2026 to 1.1bn units, IDC warns in its quarterly mobile phone tracker, representing the biggest decline in more than 10 years.
Meanwhile, Gartner is warning that “soaring memory costs” could see a decline of 10.4pc in PC shipments worldwide, and it estimates smartphone shipments could fall by 8.4pc year-on-year.
Gartner is forecasting a 130pc surge in combined DRAM and solid-state drive (SSD) prices by the end of 2026, which it says could raise PC prices by 17pc and smartphone prices by 13pc compared to 2025.
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“This is the steepest contraction in device shipments witnessed in over a decade,” said Ranjit Atwal, senior director analyst at Gartner. “Higher prices will narrow the range of devices available, prompting buyers to hold on to devices for longer, fundamentally altering upgrade cycles.”
Indeed, Gartner expects PC lifetime to increase by 15pc for business buyers and 20pc for consumers by the end of 2026, and warns that the challenge of managing older devices could increase security vulnerabilities. It also warns that any projected surge in AI PCs will now be delayed.
IDC points out that its current forecast sees a sharp decline from its November forecast amid the “intensifying memory shortage crisis”.
“What we are witnessing is not a temporary squeeze, but a tsunami-like shock originating in the memory supply chain, with ripple effects spreading across the entire consumer electronics industry,” Francisco Jeronimo, VP for worldwide client devices at IDC, warned. “The global smartphone market, particularly Android manufacturers, faces a significant threat.”
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Jeronimo goes on to say that it is the vendors at the lower end of the market that will suffer most, particularly in the Android space, while higher end makers like Apple and Samsung are better positioned to navigate the crisis. In fact, it could even allow them to expand their market share while others struggle, he said.
“We expect consolidation as smaller players exit, and low-end vendors face sharp shipment declines amid supply constraints and lower demand at higher price points,” said Nabila Popal, senior research director with IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker.
“Ultimately, we expect the sub-$500 entry-level PC segment will disappear by 2028,” said Gartner’s Atwal. “In addition, rising AI PC prices will delay the projected 50pc market penetration of AI PCs until 2028.”
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MWC 2026 officially gets underway on March 2 and will continue through March 5, but the announcements are already coming ahead of its start. We can always count on the annual tech event to bring tons of new phones, laptops and tablets, and we’re expecting to see some robots and other gadgets too — plus plenty of AI news, of course. In addition to the announcements, MWC is our chance to get hands-on time with some of the most interesting new devices, like the Xiaomi 17 Ultra.
Engadget’s Mat Smith is on the ground in Barcelona, and we’ll be updating this story as the week goes on to keep you in the loop on everything that caught our attention. Keep checking back here for the latest MWC news.
Xiaomi x Leica
Mat Smith for Engadget
Xiaomi kicked off MWC this year by announcing the global launch of its 17 Ultra smartphone, which debuted first in China back in December. It’s unclear if the phone will ever come to the US, but it’s now rolling out in Europe. Xiaomi teamed up again with Leica to make a photography-focused smartphone, and the 17 Ultra sports a 1-inch 50-megapixel camera sensor with a f/1.67 lens, a telephoto setup with a 200MP 1/1.4-inch sensor, and a 50MP ultrawide camera. There’s also a manual zoom ring around the camera.
Check out our hands on for our first impressions of what it’s like shooting with the Xiaomi 17 Ultra. And there’s more to it than just the camera. The 17 Ultra has a 6.9-inch OLED 120 Hz display that peaks at 3,500 nits of brightness, and a 6000mAh silicon-carbon battery. The Xiaomi 17 Ultra starts at £1,299 (roughly $1,750).
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Leica also announced a new phone made in partnership with Xiaomi at MWC. It looks a whole lot like Xiaomi’s 17 Ultra, but isn’t the 17 Ultra, exactly.
Leica Leitzphone by Xiaomi hands-on at MWC 2026 (Image by Mat Smith for Engadget)
Like the 17 Ultra, Leica’s Leitzphone by Xiaomi has a 1-inch camera sensor and physical controls for zoom and other settings, using a mechanical ring around the camera unit. It features a Leica-designed intuitive camera interface with the option to show just the essentials when you’re shooting, hiding all the modes and labels. There’s a monochrome shooting mode and Leica filters.
The Leica branding is splashed all over it in design and wallpapers, but it’s otherwise pretty similar to the 17 Ultra, with the same specs. Like the 17 Ultra, it has a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip and a 6.9-inch 120Hz display. This one’s priced at €1,999 (roughly $2,362).
The Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro (Xiaomi)
In addition to the 17 Ultra, Xiaomi announced two new tablets at MWC this year: the Xiaomi Pad 8 and Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro. There’s nothing revolutionary here, but they’re lightweight and thin, with both being 5.75mm thick and weighing 485g, and have a 9200mAh battery. The Pro model is powered by a Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, while the regular Pad 8 uses the Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 chipset.
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Xiaomi also unveiled a new 5000mAh powerbank, the UltraThin Magnetic Power Bank 5000 15W. The 6mm thick power bank comes in three colors with an aluminum alloy shell: orange, silver and charcoal gray. Along with that, the company introduced the Xiaomi Tag, its own take on the Bluetooth item tracker. The Xiaomi Tag has a built-in hanging loop so it can be attached directly to a keyring, and the company says it will work with both Apple Find My and Google’s Find Hub for Android.
Honor MagicPad 4
Honor
Ahead of MWC, Honor announced what it claims is the thinnest Android tablet in the world: the 4.8mm thick MagicPad 4. We’re expecting to hear more about this at Honor’s press conference on Sunday, but so far we know it features a 12.3-inch 165Hz OLED display and weighs just 450g. It comes with up to 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, and is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 chipset. The thinness doesn’t count the camera bump, Honor notes. The MagicPad 4 has 13MP rear and 9MP front cameras. It also boasts spatial audio, with eight speakers.
Just as the display is slightly smaller than the previous MagicPad, the MagicPad 4 has a smaller battery at 10100 mAh. It comes with a 66W fast charger. The MagicPad 4 will run Honor’s MagicOS 10. We don’t yet know how much it will cost, but we’ll update this after Honor’s press conference (where we’re also expecting to see the company’s robot) with any new details.
Tecno
Tecno
We can always expect to see some wild phone concepts at MWC, and this year we’re starting with one from Tecno. The company unveiled a modular concept smartphone design that can be as thin as 4.9mm in its base configuration. There’d be 10 modules to choose from based on the announcement, including various camera lenses, a gaming attachment and a power bank, relying on magnets to keep it all together — or Modular Magnetic Interconnection Technology, as Tecno is calling it.
Xiaomi has unveiled the Pad 8 Pro, and on paper at least, it looks like one of the strongest Android answers to Apple’s iPad Pro yet.
With a high-end Snapdragon chip, a 3.2K 144Hz display and a redesigned productivity-focused OS, this is clearly more than just a media tablet.
The headline upgrade is performance. The Pad 8 Pro runs on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Mobile Platform, built on a 3nm process with clock speeds reaching 4.32GHz. Xiaomi claims major gains across the board, including an 81% CPU boost and 103% GPU uplift compared to the previous generation.
In practical terms, that should translate to smoother multitasking and more stable frame rates in demanding games.
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It’s also impressively slim. At just 5.75mm thick and weighing 485g, the all-metal tablet remains portable despite housing a sizeable 9,200mAh battery. Fast charging comes via 67W HyperCharge, while Wi-Fi 7 and fingerprint unlocking round out the flagship credentials.
The 11.2-inch 3:2 display is another standout. It offers a sharp 3,200 x 2,136 resolution, up to 144Hz refresh rate, 800-nit peak brightness and Dolby Vision support. TÜV Rheinland certifications for low blue light and flicker-free viewing suggest Xiaomi is also targeting longer work and reading sessions.
Software is where Xiaomi is pushing hardest. The tablet runs Xiaomi HyperOS 3, which introduces PC-style multitasking features including a 5:5 vertical split-screen view and a new 1:9 layout option. There is also an upgraded Workstation Mode and a desktop-style browser complete with tabbed browsing and right-click support.
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There’s also a new Xiaomi Focus Pen Pro, featuring a button-free design, hover preview and gesture controls. It is designed for note-taking and creative work. Optional keyboard accessories further underline its productivity ambitions.
Audio comes via quad speakers with Dolby Atmos and Hi-Res support. Meanwhile, cameras include a 50MP rear sensor and 32MP front-facing camera for video calls.
With this level of performance, display quality and software refinement, the Pad 8 Pro positions itself firmly at the premium end of the Android tablet market. It sits closer than ever to Apple’s top-tier iPads.
For one thing, the streaming giant’s shareholders appeared deeply skeptical that the acquisition was a good deal — Netflix’s share price declined 30% since announcing the deal, while the subsequent news that it was backing down sent Netflix stock up nearly 14%.
For another, Netflix’s commitment to the deal reportedly wavered after Paramount came in with an increased offer and seemed willing to go several more rounds in a bidding war.
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By the time Sarandos met with Trump administration officials on Thursday, he may already have decided to concede. In fact, since President Donald Trump had previously warned him not to overpay, Sarandos reportedly told him, “I took your advice.”
The Xiaomi 17 Ultra is an excellent all-rounder with incredible cameras, speedy performance, an excellent screen and speakers, solid battery life, and speedy charging. There’s something for everyone here, but photographers are sure to love it the most.
Brilliant cameras
Lightning quick
Great display and speakers
Not so good for macro photography
On the pricey side
Squirrel Widget
Key Features
Top-of-the-line cameras
With three 50MP cameras, including a 1-inch main camera and an innovative new spin on the 200MP telephoto, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra’s camera system is second to none.
A real optical zoom
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Rather than relying on two separate telephoto cameras, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra sports a real optical zoom that can mechanically shift from 3.2x to 4.3x.
Super speedy
With the latest flagship Qualcomm silicon at its core, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra is one of the fastest phones around. Whether you’re interested in gaming or productivity, this handset has the muscle for it.
Introduction
Xiaomi’s top-of-the-line camera-focused flagship for 2026 has finally arrived. It’s time to get acquainted with Xiaomi 17 Ultra.
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To save any confusion, you haven’t missed anything. Xiaomi decided to skip 16 and jump straight to 17 for this series. It seems the brand finally got tired of Apple having the larger model number.
Other than the naming oddity, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra brings with it plenty of goodies. There’s a brand new optical zoom and selfie camera, an improved screen, the latest Snapdragon chip, and a bigger battery.
The Xiaomi 17 Ultra doesn’t look too dissimilar to its predecessor. The overall shape is similar, and you still get the same large centrally-placed camera hob on the rear panel.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
What’s changed this time, though, is that it’s much less curvy. The micro curves on the edge of the display and rear panel are both gone, replaced with completely flat panels. This is great when it comes to screen-protector compatibility, and I think I prefer it generally speaking, but some are sure to miss those curves.
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It’s a sizable and fairly weighty device, but this is an “Ultra” after all, and that tends to come with the territory. It’s less than 2 grams heavier than its predecessor, and while that was no featherweight, I appreciate that it hasn’t bulked up further.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
This time around, the IP rating has been bumped up to dual IP68/IP69K, rather than just IP68. Supposedly, it can now withstand immersion at up to 6m for 30 mins, rather than just 1.5m. It’s also immune to blasts from jets of hot water, which could prove useful for hot tub-related mishaps.
The Xiaomi 17 Ultra comes with a basic clear case in the box, but it’s not the usual flexible TPU number. This one’s much more rigid and shouldn’t turn yellow quite as readily. I suspect scuffs might be an issue in the long term, though.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
Unlike some rivals, there are no extra buttons on the Xiaomi 17 Ultra, just the usual power button and volume combo. However, that changes if you spring for the Leica LeitzPhone edition, which adds a rotary control around the camera island that can be used to control your zoom.
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I have the standard model in for testing, so I can’t speak to how well this control wheel works. In theory, it seems like a great idea, but in practice, I can imagine it being quite easy to knock it accidentally.
The Xiaomi 17 Ultra is available in three colours for the global market: black, white, or green. I have the white model in for testing, and it’s rather understated, with a uniform matt finish on the rear and matt aluminium side rails. The black model takes a similar approach, only with dark colour-matched side rails and a subtle red ring around the camera housing.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
If you want to make a statement, though, you’ll certainly want to check out the green model. It has a flecked finish on the rear panel that makes it stand out from the pack, and matching siderails to finish it off.
If you opt for the Leica edition, you’ll be able to choose between black and white versions, both featuring a vegan leather rear panel, two-tone detailing, and the iconic circular red Leica badge. There’s also an optional photography grip kit, which looks to be quite similar to the previous generation.
Screen
6.9-inch 120Hz 1200×2608 OLED
Flat screen, 2160Hz PWM
3500 nits peak brightness
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The Xiaomi 17 Ultra boasts a spacious 6.9-inch OLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate and a peak brightness of 3500nits, up from 3200 on the previous model.
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The other big change is that the panel now supports 2160Hz PWM dimming, up from 1920Hz. I’m not someone who is sensitive to flicker, so I can’t say I noticed the difference, but for some, that could be a big deal.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
What made more of an impact, for me, is the change from curved edges to a fully flat display. It seems to be the general trend at the moment, and I think I’m on board. I do like the way gesture controls feel on curved displays, but the durability, lack of glare, and screen protector compatibility might make flat displays the outright winner in my eyes.
Otherwise, the screen is as fantastic as you’d expect with specs like these. The colours are vivid and accurate, it’s plenty bright enough to see outdoors, and HDR content really pops. There are plenty of options if you prefer to tweak the colour balance, too, but I was fine with the default settings.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
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Cameras
50MP main camera (1-inch sensor)
50MP ultrawide (1/2.76-inch)
200MP 3.2x – 4.3x telephoto (1/1.4-inch sensor)
50MP selfie camera (AF)
Xiaomi has shaken things up in the camera department. Instead of four separate sensors on the rear, you now get three. Rather than two separate periscope telephotos, you now get a single 200MP unit that can optically zoom between 3.2x and 4.3x.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
We’ve seen similar tech from Sony and its Xperia flagships, but the difference here is with the sensor size and resolution. This zoom camera has a massive 1/1.4-inch sensor and a 200MP resolution, matching the likes of the Vivo X300 Pro and Honor Magic 8 Pro.
It’s super impressive technology, but I was a little disappointed when I realised how small the zoom range is. In full-frame terms, you can zoom from 75mm to 100mm, and honestly, that’s not a dramatic difference in framing.
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Beyond that, you’ll be digitally cropping, but a combination of the extremely high-res sensor and very clever image processing means that you get shockingly good results when doing so.
What I found really disappointing, though, were the telemacro capabilities. This optical zoom configuration means that the Xiaomi 17 Ultra telephoto can’t focus as close as the Xiaomi 15 Ultra could – and it lags behind the rivals like the Magic 8 Pro and X300 Pro, too. You can still get decent macro shots, but you’ll need to digitally crop more to achieve the results, whereas with the previous model, you could just get closer.
Aside from the new telephoto setup, the main camera and ultrawide have similar specifications to their predecessors. That’s no bad thing, as they both produce fantastic results. Especially the main camera, which excels in low-light conditions and produces lovely bokeh with its 1-inch type sensor.
Around the front, the selfie camera has been upgraded, too. It’s now 50MP, up from 32MP, and it has a larger sensor, which makes it more usable in dim conditions. Selfies on this phone are sharp, detailed, and have excellent dynamic range.
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Overall, I have been really pleased with the images I was able to take with the Xiaomi 17 Ultra. It feels like Xiaomi has refined its image processing with this generation, and I’m no longer seeing the slight overexposure or heavy-handed sharpening that I normally associate with the brand. Images from this phone look wonderfully natural, more like what I would expect from a professional mirrorless camera.
Video performance is also excellent. You can shoot at up to 4K 120fps on both the main and telephoto cameras, while the selfie camera and ultrawide shoot at up to 4K 60fps. There’s a very decent Log profile, and the ability to record in Dolby Vision HDR, too.
I have no doubts that this is one of the best smartphone camera systems on the market right now. Whether it’s portraits, sports, landscapes, or long-range zooms, you name it, the 17 Ultra can hang with the best. It’s really only the lack of telemacro capabilities that holds this phone back – and how much that matters will depend on what you like to shoot.
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Accessories
Slimmed-down Photography Kit
Full-featured Photography Kit Pro
Tactile buttons, Wirst Strap, and 67mm filters compatibility
Xiaomi’s Ultra phones have come with optional photography grips for the last few years, so it’s not too surprising that Xiaomi has released anequivalent accessory for the 17 Ultra. What surprised me, though, is that there are now two different kits to choose from.
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The design that we’re most familiar with, featuring a removable battery grip and separate phone case is now called the Photography Kit Pro, while the standard Photography Kit is a much slimmer all-in-one package.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
Starting with the new addition, it’s basically a phone case with a sculpted grip towards the base. It has a two-stage shutter button and a video record button, and it connects to the phone via Bluetooth. There’s a built-in battery, but that’s only to power the Bluetooth buttons; it doesn’t charge the phone itself.
The video record button can be programmed to activate almost anything within the camera app, but the shutter button is limited to single photo or burst mode. It’s a two-stage button, though, so you can half-press to focus before taking your shot.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
The styling is similar to the Leica edition phones, with a two-tone textured vegan leather lower and smooth upper. It looks great, in my opinion, but it’s not as functional as the Pro grip. For instance, you can’t attach filters over the lenses, and there’s no way to access the control ring on Leica edition handsets.
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Other than some aesthetic tweaks, the Pro grip functions almost identically to the last few generations, incorporating a 2000mAh battery that charges the phone in use, as well as a tactile shutter button, video button, zoom rocker, and control dial.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
What’s new this time, though, is that the case has MagSafe-compatible magnets built in (and it works with Qi chargers). There’s also a clever new 67mm filter mounting ring that rotates, so you can add something like an ND filter or a mist filter, and still be able to use the zoom ring on Leica edition phones.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
The Pro kit is definitely superior in terms of functionality, but if you never use filters, and you want something cheaper and more compact, it’s really nice that Xiaomi is providing an additional option.
Performance
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5
12GB/16GB RAM, 512GB/1TB storage
Dual stereo speakers
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The Xiaomi 17 Ultra has Qualcomm’s latest and greatest flagship SoC at its core, the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, along with either 12GB or 16GB of RAM and 512GB or 1TB of storage. I’m testing the 16GB+512GB version.
As you might expect, with specs like these, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra is a bit of a rocket. Whether you want to edit complex videos, run AI models, or play the most graphically demanding games, this phone will take it in its stride.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
I played a couple of hours of Genshin Impact with the settings maxed out, and of course, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra took it in its stride. After a good 45 minutes of playing, the phone barely heated up, and there wasn’t a frame drop in sight. This phone clearly has a very impressive cooling system on the inside.
There’s a fairly full-featured game overlay built in, too. You can use it to boost performance, block notifications, lock your screen brightness, and even open messaging apps as a floating window.
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The speakers on this phone are also very impressive. The bass is much stronger than that of most Android flagships, and it’s more controlled and less boomy than the Honor Magic 8 Pro. There’s plenty of detail and a decent stereo effect, too.
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Software & AI
HyperOS 3, based on Android 16
4 OS upgrades, 6 years of security patches
Loads of AI features
The 17 Ultra runs HyperOS 3, Xiaomi’s latest custom software built on top of Android 16. Functionally, it’s very similar to HyperOS 2, but this version comes with some significant aesthetic changes, and the iOS influence is more apparent than ever.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
There are some very iOS-looking lock screen options, including the ability to have a massive clock, depth effects, so that the clock interacts with your wallpaper, and even the ability to animate your wallpaper with generative AI.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
There’s also a fresh new Dynamic Island clone, which Xiaomi calls Hyper Island. It’s nothing particularly creative or new, but it’s super handy. Personally, I love having a way to quickly access the music that’s playing, my timers, or navigation.
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Of course, there are plenty of AI features littered throughout the system, including the usual translation tools and writing assistance. One that I found particularly handy is the ability to add AI-generated subtitles to anything you’re watching, regardless of the app it’s playing in.
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Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
There are plenty of AI features for photo editing, too, and they all work quite well. There’s outpainting, which I always find useful, as well as object removal and the ability to add background blur to a photo without having to have shot it in Portrait mode.
Xiaomi is promising 4 major OS upgrades and 6 years of security patches for this model. It fails to match the likes of Google and Samsung, but it’s not a bad commitment.
Battery life
6000mAh battery
90W wired charging
50W wireless charging
The battery situation with the Xiaomi 17 Ultra is a bit of a strange one. The global model gets a 6000mAh cell, which is a healthy increase over last year’s 5410mAh battery, but pales in comparison to the Chinese version of this phone, which gets a 6800mAh battery.
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Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
There’s nothing too strange about that; shipping regulations in Europe often mean the global versions of Chinese phones have their batteries nerfed. What makes this so peculiar, though, is that the global version of the smaller and cheaper Xiaomi 17 sports a larger 6300 mAh battery.
Regardless, for my needs, the battery life of the Xiaomi 17 Ultra has been more than sufficient. It’ll get me through the day with ease. I’ll usually end the day with around 30% or more remaining, but it’s not a two-dayer like the Oppo Find X9 Pro is.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
When it comes to charging, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra is lightning quick. It supports up to 90W speeds with a wire and 50W wirelessly. There’s no charger in the box, though, so you’ll need to budget for an appropriately quick wall adapter.
I found that just 30 minutes on the charger would take me well over 60% charged, while a full charge took just over an hour. I should note, though, that I was using a third-party charger; it may be even quicker using an official Xiaomi adapter.
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Squirrel Widget
Should you buy it?
You want one of the best camera phones around
The Xiaomi 17 Ultra is pretty great at everything, but the cameras steal the show. If you’re looking for a device that blurs the lines between smartphone and professional camera, look no further.
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You love macro photography
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The only letdown with this camera system is that the telephoto isn’t as good for close-up shots. It’s still decent, but the competition fares better in this area.
Final Thoughts
The Xiaomi 17 Ultra is a well-rounded flagship that has something to offer in every area. Whether you’re looking for high-end gaming performance, a superb screen and speakers, solid battery life and speedy charging, or an incredible camera system, the 17 Ultra has you covered.
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It’s really those who are into photography and videomaking that will enjoy this phone the most, though. The camera system is truly excellent, and at times, this feels more like a camera than a phone.
Of course, no product is perfect, and there are a few areas where Xiaomi is bested by the competition. For instance, both the Oppo Find X9 Pro and Honor Magic 8 Pro have better battery life (in my experience), and they’re better for macro photography, too.
But does that mean they’re better choices? Not necessarily. Xiaomi’s image processing and filter selection mean I often prefer the shots from the 17 Ultra, and it has plenty to offer elsewhere, too. One thing’s for certain, this is among the best camera phones available right now.
How We Test
We test every mobile phone we review thoroughly. We use industry-standard tests to compare features properly and we use the phone as our main device over the review period. We’ll always tell you what we find and we never, ever, accept money to review a product.
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Used as a main phone for over a week
Thorough camera testing in a variety of conditions
Tested and benchmarked using respected industry tests and real-world data
FAQs
Does the Xiaomi 17 Ultra support eSIM?
Yes, the global version of the Xiaomi 17 Ultra has full eSIM support.
Does the global version of the Xiaomi 17 Ultra have a smaller battery?
Yes, the global version has a 6000mAh battery, rather than a 6800mAh battery.
Xiaomi has officially unveiled the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro, and it’s immediately clear that this is the company’s boldest attempt yet to compete with the iPad Pro. With a design unmistakably inspired by Apple’s premium tablet and a strong focus on keyboard-centric productivity, Xiaomi is signalling that the Android tablet segment is ready to take pro-level computing more seriously.
At the core of the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro is the Snapdragon 8 Elite platform
A chipset that brings the kind of performance usually reserved for high-end smartphones and some laptops. This makes the tablet capable of handling demanding apps, complex multitasking, heavy design workloads, and high-frame-rate gaming without hesitation. HyperOS provides the accompanying software layer, giving the interface a level of speed and fluidity that matches the hardware’s ambitions.
The display is an immediate standout. The 3.2K resolution combined with a 144Hz refresh rate creates a fluid and visually rich experience that supports everything from entertainment and reading to design work and motion graphics. The screen’s brightness and color accuracy further elevate its appeal for artists, students, and professionals who depend on visual clarity. Powering this is a 9,200mAh battery that provides enough endurance for long working hours, extended travel use, and continuous content consumption without frequent recharging.
A keyboard and stylus that reshape how the tablet is used
What makes the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro a genuine iPad Pro challenger is not just its hardware but the ecosystem around it. Xiaomi’s new magnetic keyboard case turns the tablet into a laptop-style machine, complete with a comfortable key layout and a responsive touchpad. This accessory transforms the character of the tablet, allowing it to handle more serious tasks such as long writing sessions, office work, productivity apps, and messaging with far greater ease.
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Alongside the keyboard is the Xiaomi Focus Pen Pro, which introduces low-latency writing, improved pressure sensitivity, and more natural tilt recognition. Together, these enhancements make the stylus feel accurate and responsive, enabling everything from precise sketching and illustration to handwriting and markup work. This combination of tools positions the Pad 8 Pro as a versatile device that can shift between creative expression and productivity without effort.
A meaningful shift in the premium tablet landscape
The Pad 8 Pro arrives at a time when Android tablets are rapidly evolving. For years, the premium space has been dominated by Apple, but Xiaomi’s approach shows that an Android tablet can offer a polished, pro-grade experience if the company commits to performance, display quality, and accessory support. Users who prefer Android now have an option that does not force compromise and integrates smoothly with their existing ecosystem of phones, wearables, and laptops.
The tablet’s appeal extends further to students, hybrid workers, and creators. Anyone who wants a powerful but portable device will find the Pad 8 Pro compelling because it merges laptop-like typing, stylus precision, fast processing, and an immersive display in one device. It also serves as an option for users who want more openness and flexibility than what Apple’s closed ecosystem offers.
Cross-device integration is the future
Xiaomi’s direction with the Pad 8 Pro suggests a future where its tablets will receive deeper cross-device integration and more productivity-oriented features within HyperOS. As the company continues refining its ecosystem, the Pad 8 Pro stands as one of the clearest signals that Android tablets are entering a new era—one where performance, accessories, and software all work together to create a true alternative to the iPad Pro.