Reviews
Redmi Pad SE 8.7: Useful slate, underutilized form factor
Entry-level smartphones costing about PhP 7,000 to PhP 10,000 (US$ 122 to US$ 174) have evolved to become very reliable devices especially for people on a budget.
That’s in spite of the notion that cheaper devices tend to be just pieces of garbage. For instance, while they aren’t perfect, I can still vouch for budget handsets, like the Redmi 10C and Redmi 12, to name a few.
Entering this Redmi Pad SE 8.7 4G hands-on, I had been thinking the conversation is slightly different. It’s case to case, and a work in progress. That’s why I’m privileged enough to be able to try Redmi’s recent offering. This gave me a better opportunity to see for myself how budget tablets fair in spite of the cheaper price tag.
The 4G-capable Redmi Pad SE 8.7 was released a month after its Wi-Fi only variant. With SIM support, it means the budget tablet can connect to mobile networks, which adds another layer to its portability.
The price, as mentioned, won’t break the bank. It’s just PhP 8,999 (~US$ 157) for the PhP 4GB+64GB variant and PhP 9,999 (~US$ 174) for double the internal storage. You can buy it here.
Display: Just alright
If you’re just looking for a more expansive display for whatever specific purpose, the Redmi Pad SE 8.7 4G can give you that.
I can think of this tablet as something to introduce toddlers to visual content, like nursery rhymes, cartoon shows, educational videos, and everything in between. Watching on YouTube feels fine, with the video quality usually set to 720p.
The display uses LCD. The Corning Gorilla Glass 3 protection is quite obvious, and is a sucker for reflections and fingerprints. Nevertheless, the screen has ample brightness of up to 600 nits to fend off other sources of light.
The Redmi Pad SE 8.7 has a simplistic aluminum unibody design, along with a small circular camera island. It comes with a protective shell case with hand strap. This allows you to carry it with one hand or place it on horizontal mode for casual viewing.
Furthermore, the tablet has a 1340 x 800 resolution and up to a 90Hz refresh rate. For casual browsing, book or comic reading, and light content consumption, these are enough.
For those in the grade school level, this tablet can be handy as well for educational games. Even for grown ups, there are a handful of titles you can play on this slate.
In my case, I just played Need for Speed: No Limits, Clash Royale, and Mobile Legends: Bang Bang. As I expected, there were a few occasions where the tablet experienced lag, or even crashed. It’s just what it is.
For its audio, the pad is able to blast loud sound from its dual speakers with decent quality. And with Dolby Atmos support, there’s a degree of immersion.
But expect less if you’re viewing content to appreciate their details, like food or products you want to buy. With a low resolution and pixel density, some visuals just don’t come out enticing to the eyes.
Some display downsides
On paper, the tablet has TÜV Rheinland Low-Blue Light and Flicker Free certifications. It also supports Reading Mode which blocks out blue light to make the display appear warmer and not too painful to the eyes.
However, as this tablet has an LCD display, it still causes more strain in the long run compared to AMOLED screens. As such, patience and taking frequent screen breaks go a long way.
Also, unlike slightly more expensive offerings from the Xiaomi umbrella, the tablet does not have stylus support. In fact, drawing on the Redmi Pad SE 8.7 almost feels useless. The screen does not respond well to the motions you make with your bare fingers. Again, it’s a downside that you live with given the lower price tag.
Plus, if you really want your kids to learn how to write or draw, nothing beats old school pencil, crayon, and paper. The younger they are, the more fragile those fingers are too, so it’s only proper to get them started with those giant crayons before transitioning to a more difficult level.
Redmi Pad SE 8.7: Utility device
In all fairness, I think of the Redmi Pad SE 8.7 as a utility tool that can go hand-in-hand with your budget daily driver.
There are various audiences that can benefit from this tablet. I’m thinking small businesses like coffee shop who need a dedicated tool to accept orders via food delivery apps.
Speaking of, they can use the tablet to answer inquiries on their official channels. With SIM support, they can even respond to messages and make calls. Or connect the device to their preferred messaging app like Viber, WhatsApp, or Telegram, to name a few.
Moreover, since we’re all into sustainability nowadays, the Pad SE 8.7 can also be used to gather personal information for registration for events.
Students can perhaps take photos of lessons or notes and then transfer them to this slate for better viewing. And with a 5MP front camera, it’s enough for video conferences.
But if you need to write a lot, like me, or deal with spreadsheets, move from app to app, and more within the realm of productivity, a larger tablet (or a budget laptop) is what’s for you.
Although you can find a generic Bluetooth keyboard and a stand to connect this to, I just feel its inferior hardware will be a bane to what you want to accomplish.
I can see how the Redmi Pad SE 8.7 can act as a mobile hotspot as well given its SIM support. If you’re not expecting any important calls anyway, that will be one way to extend your accompanying phone’s battery life throughout a whole day.
Expect slowdowns, of course
Naturally, as this is still a budget tablet, one should expect slowdowns. With a MediaTek Helio G85 processor, the Redmi Pad SE 8.7 has its limits.
For example, its network speed is not topnotch. While it will provide decent speeds when in the city, I can imagine how tough it can get when it’s in suburban or provincial settings.
Even when on Wi-Fi, the device seems to have trouble competing against other more high-end devices for connection. I experienced this a lot during mobile gaming, when titles just didn’t want to load or when uploading the latest game progress to the cloud kept failing.
And even just the simple switching from horizontal to vertical orientation when held takes the display a few seconds to match appropriately.
Keep usage in moderation as well, as having several apps open will definitely push this device against the ropes.
On the plus side, with a 6,650mAh battery, there’s no doubt this device can last a full day. However, it can only support up to 18W of charging, and replenishes back to full in about three hours.
If you’re going to use it as a utility hub, then it’s best to keep it just plugged in while placed somewhere default.
Sample images
The Redmi Pad SE 8.7 4G comes with an 8MP rear camera and a 5MP front camera. They’re enough for simple documentation. You’ll be able to record legible text or simple subjects that are easy to recognize.
Naturally, don’t expect flagship level sharpness or vividness. The camera package is mainly for purpose rather than for your clout-chasing moments.
If anything, it comes with a document mode which automatically detects chunks of texts on book pages, reading materials, and other files. These are then turned into digital copies that look processed by an actual scanner or photocopy machine.
This is such an underrated feature that also eliminates the need for a third-party app. It’s definitely useful for students.
Final thoughts: Useful, underutilized form factor
After a few weeks of usage, it’s safe to say that the Redmi Pad SE 8.7 4G is a useful slate. That’s even if I feel the form factor is underutilized.
There is just something compelling about tablets in the 8 to 9-inch form factor. They’re comfortable to hold in a horizontal orientation and use them as if they’re just giant smartphones.
It’s not too awkward or difficult to take portrait or landscape photos, unlike larger display tablets with folio covers dangling while open. And users can take advantage of the form factor for mobile gaming, without the screen being too much of an issue for both hands to cover.
And even with the rise of foldable phones, such products are a lot more expensive. I understand that because Redmi wants more consumers to be able to afford it, the tablet comes with cheaper hardware. It doesn’t mean the tablet is downright ugly.
But if you gave me an 8.7-inch tablet with a capable midrange processor, more storage, and better display technology? That changes everything completely.
I won’t mind spending a little more, if you’re giving me a practical alternative to a flagship Android foldable or the iPad mini (*coughs* like the Redmi Pad Pro 5G, but in a smaller form factor).
Before I learned when the HONOR Magic V6 review embargo would lift, I had already become aware of the possibility of upcoming wide foldables.
The idea immediately caught my attention because it seemed to address one of the few remaining questions I have about today’s book-style foldables.
They’re excellent productivity devices. The larger, almost square-like display is perfect for multitasking, reading, editing documents, and working with multiple apps at once.
But much of the content we consume today isn’t square.
It’s vertical: Reels. Shorts. TikToks. Fancams.
Or it’s widescreen: YouTube videos. Movies. TV shows.
Book-style foldables can absolutely play these types of content. But when unfolded, they don’t always make the best use of the additional screen space because of their aspect ratio.
That thought lingered in the back of my mind while testing the HONOR Magic V6.
What surprised me was that despite that lingering question, the Magic V6 still made a compelling case for the current form factor. In fact, if the goal is to create a foldable that feels as close as possible to a regular flagship smartphone while still unfolding into a tablet, HONOR may have come closer than anyone else.
The HONOR Magic V6 is priced at RM 7,699 in Malaysia, with pre-orders running from June 4 to 11, 2026 and bundled gifts worth up to RM 3,797.
That’s flagship foldable money. Fortunately, the Magic V6 spends very little time reminding you that it’s a foldable and most of its time convincing you it’s simply a very good smartphone.
It feels like a regular smartphone
The HONOR Magic V6 looks and feels almost too much like a standard slab smartphone that you almost forget it can unfold into a larger screen.
That’s perhaps the most impressive thing about the device.
Most certainly, I felt the Galaxy S26 Ultra more when carrying it compared to the Magic V6. Despite being a foldable, it never feels cumbersome in daily use.
One of the subtle improvements I appreciated most was the button placement.
This is one of those low-key things you don’t really think about at first but becomes important over time. There’s little to no adjustment required when moving from a regular smartphone to the Magic V6 because the buttons sit exactly where you expect them to.
I use it alongside both the HONOR Magic8 Pro and Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra and the transition feels seamless. That’s something I can’t quite say about the OPPO Find N6, whose power button still sits at a height that feels a little awkward.
Folded, the Magic V6 doesn’t feel like a compromise compared to a traditional flagship.
It simply feels like a regular flagship smartphone.
Unfolded, it feels natural too. The display even feels larger than the Galaxy Z Fold7 and HONOR Magic V5 that I used previously.
And that’s where the appeal of a book-style foldable continues to shine.
Productivity remains the killer feature
The larger display became particularly useful during several production shoots.
I found myself timekeeping to make sure we stayed on schedule while simultaneously checking scripts and production notes. It’s one of those situations where the larger screen immediately proves its value.
On another occasion, I handed the unfolded device to a project lead so she could review a script while planning shots for the day.
It immediately made her stop and consider whether she should get a foldable herself.
Moments like these highlight the unique advantage of book-style foldables.
The larger screen doesn’t just exist for the sake of being larger. It enables workflows that simply aren’t as comfortable on a conventional smartphone.
That’s why, despite my growing curiosity about where foldables go next, the Magic V6 reminded me why this category became appealing in the first place.
Battery confidence is underrated
An overwhelming yes.
That’s my answer when asked whether the battery capacity translates into confidence.
The Magic V6 is an endurance beast.
I never worried about using it folded or unfolded throughout the day. I never worried about taking photos, multitasking, or spending extended periods on the larger display.
For the most part, I simply knew that no matter what I did during a normal day, I’d still have enough battery to get home or reach somewhere I could recharge.
As someone who tends to become conscious about battery life once it drops below 50 percent, that’s saying something.
I also noticed myself worrying about the battery less the more time I spent with the device. I got used to how much power it consumed depending on what I was doing throughout the day.
Compared to the Galaxy Z Fold7 and HONOR Magic V5, the Magic V6 feels like it has more endurance.
It also charges faster.
The media consumption question
Did the Magic V6 make me watch more videos than I normally would on a phone?
Not really.
Most of my phone-based video consumption consists of Reels, Shorts, and the occasional K-pop fancam. Longer content usually happens elsewhere. If I’m watching a movie, a series, or even a lengthy YouTube video, I’d much rather do it on a TV or tablet.
For the purposes of this review, I spent some time watching aespa Karina’s “Lemonade” facecam. I figured if there was any content I’d naturally watch on a phone, it would be that.
Folded and held in hand, it’s your typical smartphone viewing affair. In fact, the cover display is still a little narrower than I personally prefer.
You can also prop it up in Flex Mode and watch hands-free, which works surprisingly well when you’re sitting at a desk or table.
When unfolded, things become a little more complicated.
You can watch content in its original aspect ratio and live with the black bars. At night, they practically disappear. In brighter environments, they’re much more noticeable.
You can also pinch to zoom and fill more of the display. This works particularly well for content where the subject stays near the center of the frame. Facecams like Karina’s are a perfect example.
The challenge is that much of today’s content exists in either 9:16 or 16:9 formats, while book-style foldables unfold into something much closer to a square.
The result is that the additional screen space isn’t always utilized as efficiently as you might expect.
That’s not really a criticism of the Magic V6 itself.
Rather, it’s one of the reasons I’ve become interested in the idea of wide foldables. The Magic V6 excels at productivity because of its aspect ratio. Whether that same aspect ratio remains ideal for modern media consumption is a question I continue to think about.
Cameras that don’t feel like a compromise
The camera system is one of the standout features of the device.
For a foldable, it takes really good photos. Photos I wouldn’t hesitate to post immediately on social media.
I’ve become particularly fond of HONOR’s Authentic Filter and used it extensively throughout my testing. The images look excellent and carry a look that I genuinely enjoy.
I still notice some limitations once I move beyond 6x zoom, but realistically, most users won’t spend much time there.
For everyday photography, the Magic V6 delivers more than enough.
That’s important because it removes one of the traditional compromises associated with foldables. Check out the samples below.
Witcher in Concert night
Food with friends
Taipei streets part 1
Middle Name Coffee and Space
Taipei streets part 2
Instil Coffee
Taipei streets part 3
Taipei at night + Bar Shock
Taipei at night + Backstreet Bar
Side gig
Sushi Party
Apple-friendly and easy to live with
One of the more pleasant surprises was how useful the Apple ecosystem features turned out to be.
Funny story.
I attended a sushi party where one of the guests happened to be an engineer who liked tinkering with hardware. He brought a small development board loaded with chips and components. When powered on, it mimicked the pairing process of AirPods and attempted to communicate with nearby Apple devices.
As he was scanning the room for iPhones, he was surprised to see his setup interacting with the HONOR Magic V6 I was carrying.
It’s a small anecdote, but it serves as a real-world reminder of how much effort HONOR has put into making the device work alongside Apple’s ecosystem.
More practically, I’ve regularly used the Magic V6 to move files between the phone and my MacBook Pro M4. The process is straightforward and useful enough that it naturally became part of my workflow.
The same can be said about durability.
The funny thing is people often comment about how not-so-careful I am with my devices. It’s not that I don’t take care of them. I simply carry a lot of gear at once and sometimes toss things into my bag without thinking too much about it.
Despite that less-than-careful handling, the Magic V6 hasn’t sustained any significant or noticeable damage.
Is the HONOR Magic V6 your GadgetMatch?
The HONOR Magic V6 is the fulfillment of the book-style foldable promise.
It’s a standard-sized smartphone that unfolds into something larger. It unlocks productivity and multitasking capabilities exactly the way you imagine it would.
The weight, thickness, and handling are about as close as you’re going to get to a regular smartphone. What’s remarkable is that HONOR achieved this while also delivering excellent battery life, fast charging, and a camera system that rarely feels like a compromise.
It won’t stop me from being curious about where foldables go next.
But it did remind me how good today’s foldables have already become.
If we’re judging the HONOR Magic V6 based on what a book-style foldable is supposed to be, there is very little left to sacrifice. That’s why I’m giving the Magic V6 the GadgetMatch Seal of Approval.
Reviews
Close without crossing: A Xiaomi 17T Pro photo essay
Distance and closeness are not always opposites.
I have spent the better part of the last few weeks grappling with multiple emotions.
I feel silly referencing this but as a “feel” type, my days are guided by vibe and mood. It’s been a challenge trying to reconcile and make sense of everything.
Thankfully, the Xiaomi 17T Pro presented an unexpected outlet.
So no, this isn’t exactly a review of the Xiaomi 17T Pro. This is yours truly, once again, processing feelings through a telephoto essay.
The “T” is for Telephoto
When being briefed about Xiaomi’s latest device, my favorite part was when a guest photographer jokingly attached the T in the Xiaomi 17T series to “telephoto.”
It’s not official or anything. But in this case, it made perfect sense.
My relationship with Xiaomi’s T series has always been a little complicated. For a while it felt like it was searching for an identity. One year it was positioned as a performance-focused device. Then it became an all-rounder.
Now, one of its biggest highlights is a dedicated 115mm equivalent telephoto camera. The reality is that it might actually be all of those things at once.
For this piece, however, I ignored almost everything else. I shot almost exclusively at 115mm.
No elaborate test plan, no checklist of scenarios, and no mission to prove a point. I simply carried the phone everywhere and photographed whatever caught my attention.
At first, I thought I was testing a camera. Eventually, I realized the camera was teaching me something instead.
Chasing
When the year started, I was certain about something. Or perhaps someone.
The conversations were easy. The banter felt natural. The possibility of something more lingered quietly in the background.
After a few genuine attempts, reality eventually became clear. This wasn’t going where I secretly hoped it would. I felt defeated.
But apparently, I wasn’t done learning yet.
One thing I quickly discovered about shooting at 115mm is that distance changes how you approach a subject.
You cannot simply stand where you are and expect every shot to work. Sometimes you move. Sometimes you wait. And sometimes you accept that a moment isn’t yours to capture.
The Xiaomi 17T Pro’s telephoto camera made those adjustments feel surprisingly natural. The focal length compressed scenes beautifully while still allowing me to isolate subjects from busy surroundings.
More importantly, it encouraged patience. Not every frame needed to be forced.
Blind projection
Waiting in the wings was another lesson entirely.
As a photographer, there are moments when something catches your attention immediately. A shape. A silhouette. A person. A scene.
From a distance, it looks compelling.
The problem is that distance leaves room for imagination. Sometimes too much room. You think you know what you’re looking at. But you don’t.
The more I used the 115mm lens, the more I appreciated how it could pull distant subjects closer while still leaving context around them. It gave me a cleaner view of things that initially felt obscured.
Yet photography has limits. A lens can reveal details. It cannot reveal meaning. That part still requires understanding what’s actually in front of you.
Generative longing
After some quiet reflection, I realized that much of what occupied my attention wasn’t reality at all. It was possibility. Potential.
Stories constructed from incomplete information. As it turns out, people aren’t the only subjects we do this to. Photographers do it all the time.
We imagine a frame before it exists. Then we convince ourselves the next corner might hold something extraordinary. And we chase moments that never arrive.
Sometimes they do. Most of the time they don’t.
The Xiaomi 17T Pro encouraged a different approach.
Instead of hunting for specific shots, I found myself roaming freely. Walking more. Observing more. Adjusting my position constantly to find a better composition.
After a few days, I stopped thinking about the lens itself and started understanding the space around me.
I knew how far to stand, what would fit into frame, and when a moment was worth waiting for.
The telephoto camera became less about zooming in and more about understanding my position relative to a scene.
And that’s when things started getting interesting.
Close without crossing
Something unexpected happened while reviewing this gallery. There are more people here than in any collection of sample photos I’ve ever taken.
Normally, I avoid photographing people. I’ve always worried it feels intrusive. The telephoto lens changed that.
The extra reach allowed me to observe moments without disrupting them. Most of the people here aren’t looking at the camera. Many are turned away entirely. They’re simply existing within their own space.
And perhaps that’s what fascinated me most.
After spending so much time chasing, projecting, and attaching meaning to things that only existed in my head, I found myself approaching photography differently.
There was no grand pursuit. No dramatic realization. No need to manufacture scenarios. I simply paid attention.
Telephoto photography is often associated with distance. Over the last few weeks, however, it taught me something else.
Distance and closeness are not always opposites.
Sometimes maintaining a little distance is what allows a moment to remain exactly what it is. Sometimes stepping back helps you see more clearly.
And sometimes the people, places, and experiences that matter most are not the ones furthest away. They’re already within view.
Shooting at 115mm taught me that keeping a little distance can be its own way of staying close.
Maybe that’s what this gallery ultimately became. Not a collection of subjects I couldn’t reach. Not proof of anything.
Just a record of moments I was fortunate enough to witness.
Health
Spring reset: Growing more at home with Auk Mini
From kitchen counter experiment to everyday habit
Spring and summer rolling around almost always makes me want to reset something in my routine.
A few years ago, it was growing broccoli sprouts in a jar. Getting the Auk Mini over Christmas felt like the natural next step.
From sprouts to something more
Starting with sprouts was easy. After having them at a family gathering, it clicked that I could actually grow something, even in our small apartment. Anyone, including my husband can do it on the kitchen counter, and upkeep takes less than a minute a day. Watching something grow and actually eating it made me realize how nice it is to have fresh greens around all the time.
The Auk Mini builds on that. Instead of just one thing in a jar, now I have herbs growing consistently at home.
Getting started was easy
This was the part I was most unsure about, but it ended up being very straightforward. Setup took a few minutes, the instructions were clear, and nothing felt overly technical. The kit comes with everything you need to start: Auk Mini itself, seeds for planting, coco fiber, and nutrients that you add to the water to support both growth and flavor.
Once it’s up and running, it mostly takes care of itself. The lighting system handles what the plants need throughout the day, and the watering system keeps everything consistent. I have been away on trips, and I still come home to herbs that are healthy and fresh, waiting to be trimmed and added to my food.
It fits real life and small spaces
Living in a New York apartment, space is limited. While there are community gardens I could participate in, it’s not as convenient as having access to your own, especially when you’re in the middle of a snowstorm or a heatwave.
The Auk Mini sits beside my microwave, on a table that used to be my desk. It doesn’t feel like I added a new project to my life – it just blends in. I have the black and walnut version, which works well with the rest of my space, but it also comes in white, with oak or cork as other finishes, if you want something lighter.
Watching and competing
My husband and I set it up together and turned it into a challenge: who would harvest first?
Our kit came with basil and parsley. He planted basil, which sprouted first. I took on parsley, which grew much slower and wasn’t ready for harvest until a little over six weeks later. The competition was a small thing, but it made the whole process more fun. We started paying attention to growth day by day, and it’s satisfying when you finally get to use what you grew.
One thing we learned pretty quickly is that different plants grow at different speeds, which can make lighting placement a little tricky in a shared setup like the Auk Mini. Since the basil grew faster and taller, we had to angle the light unevenly so it wouldn’t burn the basil while still giving the parsley enough exposure to catch up.
It changed how I use herbs
Basil and parsley used to be something I added as garnish. Now I’m using them all the time because they’re right within arm’s reach.
I’ve been making sauces, marinades, pesto, even building meals and cocktails around them. It’s expanded the flavors we use in home cooking, and forced me to experiment instead of defaulting to our go-to recipes inspired by East Asian cooking. In fact, the biggest hurdle I’ve encountered is not having enough recipes in my repertoire that use herbs.
Even when a dish doesn’t call for it, I’ll cut some and add it anyway. Every time I did, it made the dish better. When something is always available and always fresh, you naturally start using more of it. And if you trim it properly, it just keeps growing back. It doesn’t go bad or get forgotten in the fridge.
You can grow anything you want
One of my favorite things about Auk Mini is that it’s not a proprietary system. They do offer other kits like a chili and tomato set or an Italian cuisine mix, but you can also grow your own choices.
I joined a Facebook group of Auk growers, and it’s been inspiring to see how others are using and expanding their indoor gardens. It makes me excited to try things that are harder to find or expensive in the U.S., especially vegetables and herbs I grew up with, like pechay, moringa, lemongrass, pandan, and kangkong.
A small step toward something bigger
Growing herbs indoors reminds me of something from years ago. In university, I did an immersion program in a low-income community. We recommended sustainable food systems for the stay-at-home moms we met — including hydroponics systems — both as a source of extra income and fresh food.
That experience stayed with me, but I never acted on it. This feels like a small, techie version of that idea: a hydroponic system that works in real life, in a small space, and is easy to keep up with.
Is the Auk Mini your GadgetMatch?
Starting with sprouts showed me I could easily grow something. The Auk Mini showed me I can keep going and expand it. Now I have fresh greens ready whenever I need them.
It starts at $259, which isn’t the cheapest way to get into hydroponics. If you don’t use herbs on the daily like I do, the cost is even harder to justify. But that’s also why I recommend it even more. It’s convenient, it’s fresh, and at the same time it challenges you to be more creative with food.
Auk Mini’s ease of setup and maintenance, and flexibility make it worth it, especially if you don’t know where to start. It was a great hobby to start the year with, and an even better habit I’ve kept building on five months on. It’s given me confidence I can grow my own food for the rest of my life, one way or another.
Editor’s Note: Since this article was first published, Auk has updated the name Auk Mini to Auk Mini 1. They also announced the Auk Mini 2, currently on preorder starting at $199. This newer model has a smaller footprint, redesigned lighting, new colorways, and the ability to use larger plant pots.
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