
Chinese technology giant Xiaomi is planning a major push into custom silicon and artificial intelligence, outlining an ambitious strategy that includes releasing a new smartphone processor every year and launching an AI assistant designed for international markets, according to company executives speaking to CNBC.
The plan marks one of Xiaomi’s boldest attempts yet to compete directly with companies like Apple and Qualcomm, both of which dominate the global smartphone chip ecosystem.
Xiaomi President Lu Weibing said the company intends to release a new generation of its in-house mobile processor every year, marking a shift toward deeper vertical integration in its smartphone business.
The effort will start with the company’s XRING O1 processor, built using an advanced 3-nanometer manufacturing process. The chip is designed to power future Xiaomi smartphones and enable tighter integration between hardware, operating system software, and artificial intelligence features.
Developing custom chips is one of the most challenging undertakings in the smartphone industry, typically requiring years of engineering investment and billions of dollars in development costs. Xiaomi has already committed to investing at least 50 billion yuan (about $6.9 billion) over the next decade in semiconductor development as it seeks to build a stronger in-house technology stack.
If successful, the annual chip roadmap would bring Xiaomi closer to Apple’s strategy of designing its own silicon allowing tighter control over performance, battery optimisation, and device capabilities.
Alongside the chip strategy, Xiaomi is also developing a new artificial intelligence assistant tailored for international markets.
The company already operates an AI assistant called Xiao Ai inside China, but the upcoming version is expected to target global users and support Xiaomi’s expanding product ecosystem outside its home market.
Reports suggest the assistant could rely partly on models from Google, including integration with Gemini, combined with Xiaomi’s own software layer and device intelligence.
The AI assistant is expected to play a central role in Xiaomi’s broader ecosystem, connecting smartphones, smart home devices, and even the company’s growing electric vehicle line-up.
The strategy reflects Xiaomi’s long-term ambition to control more of the underlying technologies powering its devices.
Future smartphones are expected to integrate:
- Xiaomi’s XRING processors
- The company’s HyperOS operating system
- AI-driven software features and assistants
Bringing those elements together could allow Xiaomi to optimize device performance more tightly while reducing reliance on third-party chip suppliers.
The company has increasingly expanded its ecosystem beyond smartphones into smart homes, wearables, and electric vehicles. Xiaomi’s first electric vehicle, the Xiaomi SU7, launched recently as part of the firm’s push into connected hardware platforms.
The annual chip strategy also signals Xiaomi’s intent to compete more aggressively in the premium smartphone market, where companies like Apple and Samsung dominate through tight integration between hardware, chips, and software.
By designing its own processors and AI systems, Xiaomi hopes to differentiate its devices while delivering better optimization across features like photography, gaming, battery efficiency, and AI workloads.
The company has not yet provided a full timeline for the global rollout of its AI assistant or its first XRING-powered smartphone outside China, but executives say the roadmap will unfold gradually over the coming years.
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