
With the Xring O1, the company’s first proprietary chipset, Xiaomi is introducing the Xiaomi 15S Pro smartphone and Xiaomi Pad 7 Ultra tablet in China. 9To5Google claims that by lowering its dependency on outside chip manufacturers like Qualcomm, the corporation is moving towards independence.
Xring 01
A 3nm architecture is the basis for Xiaomi’s first custom-built system-on-chip (SoC), the Xring O1, the report available to BrandSpur digital news platform claims. Both a 16-core graphic processing unit (GPU) and a 10-core CPU will be feature-rich. A 6-core neural processing unit (NPU), specifically designed to manage on-device processing for Xiaomi’s native AI-powered capabilities, will also be included in the chip.
This SoC will make its debut in the Xiaomi 15S Pro and Pad 7 Ultra, but it might possibly show up in more Xiaomi devices in the future.
Xiaomi 15S Pro

The Xiaomi 15S Pro smartphone is anticipated to keep the high-end design and features of the Xiaomi 15 Pro, according to a report by GSMArena. It will have a 6.73-inch LTPO AMOLED display with a refresh rate of 120 Hz and QHD+ resolution. A 50MP primary camera, an ultra-wide camera, and a 5x periscope telephoto lens are anticipated to make up the smartphone’s triple camera setup for photography. A 6,100mAh battery that supports 90W cable charging is probably what it will have.
The smartphone, which is anticipated to be available in two colourways—black and blue—will run Xiaomi HyperOS 2, which is based on Android 15.
Xiaomi pad 7 Ultra
The XRING O1 chip will power the Xiaomi Pad 7 Ultra tablet, which is said to have a 14-inch 3.2K OLED panel with a maximum brightness of 1,600 nits. With its 12,000mAh battery, the Xiaomi Pad 7 Ultra tablet should be able to play videos for up to 18.95 hours and run in ultra-power-saving mode for 528 days.
According to Xiaomi, HyperOS 2 will be tablet-optimized and provide a better multitasking experience. The company’s new magnesium alloy tablet keyboard, designed especially for the Xiaomi Pad 7 Ultra, will work with it.





