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On a full charge with moderate usage, the Note 5 Pro can last you easily for a day and a half.But the most important thing is the price — the iPhone SE costs Rs 18,999 for the base 32GB variant and the Redmi Note 5 Pro costs Rs 16,999 for the top-end 6GB+64GB variant. You can download songs and transfer them to other Android users in whichever way you fancy — Bluetooth and Wi-Fi sharing.

But, the results not on par with the Note 5 Pro&weft accumulator parts for sale39;s camera. Why? Because an iPhone holds better value over an Android smartphone any given day, especially when you consider the fact that Apple’s two-year-old midrange offering can still battle it out with the best Android midrange smartphone from the present. iOS is tastefully designed with a polished user interface, with a focus on small conveniences that are relevant to the user in daily usage scenarios. However, with a smaller display and a highly optimised power-efficient OS, the iPhone SE can last almost a full day on a single charge under moderate usage, which isn’t on par with the Note 5 Pro’s battery life but is still impressive nonetheless.Winner: Redmi Note 5 ProValue:This is where the scales are balanced for both the parties.

The iPhone SE, on the other hand, has a comparatively smaller 1,624mAh battery.Winner: Apple iPhone SECamera:This is an area where the Redmi Note 5 Pro takes a marginal edge. However, the iPhone SE can shoot 4K videos at 30fps, making it one of the few phones in this range to shoot 4K videos. And, at the end of the day, it’s an iPhone — a name that’s enough to raise your collar in the society.(source).Winner: Redmi Note 5 ProBattery:Xiaomi’s Redmi series has always been about bigger batteries and the Note 5 Pro with its bigger 4000mAh battery is no exception. Since # iOS is a closed ecosystem, the iPhone SE offers fewer customisation options to its users, which is good enough for those looking for a no-nonsense user interface. This makes choosing the winner way more difficult as both have their own share of pros and cons. However, iOS is a walled garden and therefore, you will have to adapt to iOS’s way instead of making the phone adapt to you.However, we have a subjective winner — it’s the iPhone SE.Unless you shoot 4K videos a lot, the iPhone SE is recommended. The photos have adequate colours and decent contrast with adequate detailing. While one may argue that MIUI’s monthly updates add new features and fix issues, the newer releases bring with them new issues and tend to slow down the device over the course of time.

The open-source nature of Android OS (not the latest one though) on the Redmi Note 5 Pro gives you access to millions of apps, games and launchers, both from the Google PlayStore and various third-party sources. Therefore, if you don’t want to be locked in a closed ecosystem, it is advisable to stay away from the iPhone SE.The iPhone SE, on the other hand, has a 12MP rear camera and while it takes good photos, it is showing its age.

There’s a portrait mode that is pretty decent at giving out bokeh shots with naturally blurred backgrounds. The 20MP single selfie camera with an LED flash also utilises AI to take impressive bokeh selfies. The Redmi Note 5 Pro proudly flaunts its good display, long-lasting battery and a decent camera, but the iPhone SE offers better value, superior performance and a superb build. Apple’s exceptional support for iPhones is proven, which means that if you prefer keeping your phone with you for longer periods of time, then the iPhone SE has you covered for two more years, which is certainly better than Xiaomi’s single-year support for its midrangers.Most of that mega-performance is down to the GPU pushing lesser pixels on the SE’s display.

And as for updates, midrange Xiaomi phones only get to enjoy one major Android OS update, that too a year after Google releases it for the market. The front 1. With the iPhone SE, you will be forced to stay with Apple’s services for a better experience (such as Siri’s integration with Apple Music) instead of choosing third-party ones, which Android allows. You can plug in flash drives and even a conventional mouse as well, which almost makes it a portable computer. However, Android isn’t the most secure platform and therefore, you keep on getting exposed to news alerts of another malware attacking Android smartphones over a particular year.2MP selfie sensor is good enough for video calls.

iPhone SEConclusion:Once we sum up the positives and negatives of both the Redmi Note 5 Pro and the iPhone SE, both of them turn out to be equally impressive. However, for everything else, the Redmi Note 5 Pro takes the lead in the camera department. The Note 5 Pro’s 12MP+5MP dual rear camera takes noticeably good pictures with natural colours, adequate details and decent low light performance.The iPhone SE focuses on the Note 5 Pro’s shortcomings here — an almost stable OS experience followed by timely security updates. Additionally, there’s no bokeh-based portrait mode, which could be a deal-breaker for those obsessed with photography. Add to that Xiaomi’s persistent addition of bloatware over the time and you end up with a software experience that gets stale over the course of time
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