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The pace of innovation in the field of mobile phones is slowly but surely "slowing down", and phone manufacturers are currently focusing mainly on cameras or charging speed. It hasn't been that long since we saw you informed that Xiaomi is working on 120W charging. This news turned out to be true and Xiaomi even showed the world a phone that supports this fast charging earlier than expected. It is the Mi 10 Ultra model, which charges from 0 to 100% in 23 minutes. Now the Chinese company has also focused on super-fast wireless charging. What about Samsung? Will he respond?

A big competitor of the South Korean technology giant - Xiaomi has officially introduced 80W wireless charging. It promises to charge a smartphone with a battery capacity of 4000mAh to 100% in 19 minutes. Xiaomi also demonstrated its claim in a video where we can see a specially modified Mi 10 Pro phone with a 4000mAh battery. 10% in a minute, 50% in 8 minutes and 100% in 19 minutes, this is the result that the Chinese electronics manufacturer presented in a short video.

The main reason why not all mobile device manufacturers have yet implemented fast charging in their devices is battery degradation. This problem was also solved by Xiaomi during the development of the mentioned technology, we will have to wait a little longer to see how they managed to manage this ailment. However, Oppo is also interested in fast charging. She introduced 125W wired charging and let it be known that such fast charging degrades the battery to 80% of its capacity in 800 cycles, which is not a bad result at all.

But the fundamental question is how Samsung will respond to Xiaomi in this area. This is because it also offers flagships Galaxy Note 20 or Galaxy S20 only 15W wireless charging, yes you read that right. In addition, 15W charging was already supported by the models Galaxy S6 or Note 5 from 2015, during that time the tech giant from South Korea only improved wireless charging with Fast Charge 2.0 technology, which slightly increased the charging speed. But despite that Galaxy The S10+, equipped with a 4100mAh battery, charges from 0 to 100% in an incredible 120 minutes.

The last major upgrade we saw in Samsung's train ships was the removal of the display bezels on the model Galaxy S8, but more than three years have passed since then. Will Samsung still be able to jump on the passing train? Will it once again provide its customers with innovations worthy of its size? Maybe we'll see soon during the performance Galaxy S21 (S30).

Source: Android Authority, Phone Arena

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