In recent years, mobile phones have become devices that, in addition to being used to communicate through applications such as WhatsApp or Telegram, are also equipment that they work almost like a vault for files like photos or videos.
And, with the improvement in the quality of mobile cameras, the truth is that current photos and videos have nothing to do with those of a few years ago. Now mobile phones have hundreds of megapixel cameras in some cases.
Also, the resolutions at which videos can be recorded have changed over the years. The HD is even unpleasant to see due to the lack of general detail and this may be due to the fact that, now, virtually almost any device can record in 4K.
The fact that they can record at high resolutions or take pictures with many megapixels does not mean that the results are good because many factors such as the quality of image processing come into play to ensure that.
But what doesn’t change so much whether it’s photos or videos of poor quality is the fact that you have to store them somewhere and in the case of mobile phones, the place is the memory of the device since cloud services like Google Photos are no longer unlimited.
Xiaomi seems to believe that the future of storing these elements in mobile devices is to offer a large amount of memory in any type of device, not only those of higher ranges or those that have a specific sector such as the one destined for the gamer world.
The last thing that has been seen that the Asian company would do is thatI would start betting on 512 GB memories in their mobile devices from both the main brand, Xiaomi, and Redmi and POCO. The information of this movement comes from the hand of Gizmochina.
Of course, the devices in which this amount of memory will be integrated are expected to be launched over the next few months. Go, it is very likely that until the end of the year we will not know Xiaomi’s proposals where 512 GB are integrated.
At the moment, the only thing we can do is wait until the Asian firm decides to launch these devices on the market and, we assume, that when they are launched they will reach our borders so that we can test them first-hand.