Wellness is something you track, not something you hope for
In an age when health has become something we measure rather than merely hope for, Xiaomi has released three new wearables — the Smart Band 10 Pro, Watch S5, and Buds 6 — each designed to make the invisible rhythms of the body legible in daily life. The devices arrive not as novelties but as instruments of a broader cultural shift: the belief that self-knowledge, delivered through data, is itself a form of care. Whether worn on the wrist, strapped to the ear, or consulted after a run, they represent a quiet wager that the examined life is now also the quantified one.
- Millions of people have already moved health monitoring out of the clinic and into the everyday — Xiaomi is now equipping that movement with three tightly integrated devices.
- The Smart Band 10 Pro handles the fundamentals — continuous heart rate, SpO₂, stress, sleep, and 150+ sports modes — all in a lightweight band that lasts 21 days on a single charge.
- The Watch S5 raises the stakes for serious athletes, offering precision GNSS tracking, faster satellite acquisition, and recovery insights powered by Xiaomi HyperOS.
- The Buds 6 addresses the mental dimension of wellness — active noise cancellation, Hi-Fi audio, and dual-mic call clarity engineered from 1,000 ear models for all-day comfort.
- All three devices are available now through Xiaomi's official channels, Shopee, Lazada, and authorized retailers, completing an ecosystem built around the idea that wellness is tracked, not left to chance.
The way people relate to their own health has quietly transformed. Where once a yearly doctor's visit marked the outer boundary of self-monitoring, millions now wear devices that track heartbeats, oxygen levels, sleep, and movement in real time. Xiaomi's latest release — the Smart Band 10 Pro, Watch S5, and Buds 6 — is a direct response to that transformation, offering three entry points into a single, data-driven picture of personal wellness.
The Smart Band 10 Pro serves as the foundation. Lightweight and water-resistant to 5ATM, it continuously monitors heart rate, blood oxygen, stress, and sleep quality, while supporting over 150 sports modes for everything from swimming to cycling. Its AMOLED display stays readable during exercise, and its 21-day battery life means it rarely needs to leave the wrist.
The Watch S5 is built for those who want more. Advanced GNSS tracking delivers the kind of route precision that serious runners, cyclists, and hikers depend on, while recovery monitoring helps users understand not just effort, but adaptation. Running on Xiaomi HyperOS, it connects fluidly with other devices in the ecosystem — and matches the band's impressive 21-day battery life.
The Buds 6 completes the picture from a different angle entirely. Engineered using data from over 1,000 ear models, they're designed for the long hours between workouts — cutting ambient noise for focus, delivering Hi-Fi audio for recovery, and handling calls cleanly through a dual-microphone system. Google Fast Pair and dual-device connectivity make them as practical as they are polished.
Together, the three devices make a quiet but confident argument: that wellness is no longer something you hope for, but something you build — one data point at a time. All are available now through Xiaomi's official channels and major retail platforms across the country.
The way people think about health has shifted. It's no longer something you address once a year at a doctor's office. Now, millions of people carry devices that track their heartbeat, measure oxygen levels, monitor sleep, and log every step—turning the invisible work of staying well into something visible, measurable, and actionable. Xiaomi is betting that this shift toward constant self-awareness is here to stay, and it's released three new devices designed to fit seamlessly into that daily surveillance of the self: the Smart Band 10 Pro, the Watch S5, and the Buds 6.
The Smart Band 10 Pro is the entry point to this ecosystem—a lightweight wristband that does the foundational work of health tracking. It monitors heart rate continuously, tracks blood oxygen saturation, measures stress levels, and logs sleep quality. The device supports more than 150 different sports modes, including newer additions like cycling and playground activities, which means it can theoretically adapt to almost any physical activity a person might do. The display is an AMOLED screen bright enough to read while exercising, and the battery lasts up to 21 days before needing a charge. For swimmers and anyone doing water-based exercise, it's rated for 5ATM water resistance and can track heart rate even underwater.
For people who want more granular data and deeper insights into their fitness, the Watch S5 steps up the offering. It's a full smartwatch that adds advanced GPS capabilities—the kind of precision that matters if you're serious about running, cycling, or hiking. The satellite acquisition is faster, the route tracking more accurate, and the device can help users understand not just how hard they worked, but how well they recovered afterward. The Watch S5 runs on Xiaomi HyperOS, which means it integrates with other Xiaomi devices through gesture controls and intuitive interactions. Like the band, it also delivers 21 days of battery life.
The third piece is the Buds 6, which approaches wellness from a different angle. These are earbuds designed for people who spend their days moving between meetings, workouts, and commutes. They feature active noise cancellation that's meant to cut through ambient sound—whether you're trying to focus at work, listen to music uninterrupted, or settle into a podcast or meditation session. The microphones are tuned for call quality, using a dual-microphone system to filter out background noise during conversations. The audio itself is positioned as premium, with a Hi-Fi system designed to deliver rich sound. The earbuds were engineered using data from over 1,000 different ear models to ensure they fit comfortably for extended periods. They support Google Fast Pair, can connect to two devices at once, and are controlled through a dedicated app.
What Xiaomi is really selling here is a complete picture—a way to know yourself through data. The band tracks the basics. The watch adds precision for serious athletes. The earbuds handle the mental and emotional side of wellness, creating space for focus and calm in a noisy world. All three devices are available now through Xiaomi's official channels, Shopee, Lazada, and authorized retailers across the country. Whether this particular combination of devices becomes the standard way people monitor their health remains to be seen, but the underlying assumption—that wellness is something you track, not something you hope for—has already won.
Citações Notáveis
Devices empower users to stay active, monitor key health metrics, and remain connected—whether they're working out, powering through a busy workday, or simply striving for healthier living— Xiaomi product positioning
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Why does Xiaomi think people need three separate devices instead of one that does everything?
Because health isn't one thing. You need different tools for different parts of your life. A band is light enough to forget you're wearing it. A watch gives you the precision an athlete needs. Earbuds handle the mental side—focus, calm, the stuff that doesn't show up on a heart rate monitor but matters just as much.
The Smart Band 10 Pro supports 150 sports modes. Does anyone actually use that many?
Probably not. But the point is flexibility. Someone might swim one day, play basketball the next, then go for a hike. The device adapts instead of forcing you into categories. It's about meeting people where they actually are, not where the manufacturer thinks they should be.
Twenty-one days of battery life seems like a long time. Why does that matter so much?
Because if you have to charge every other day, you stop wearing it. The data becomes inconsistent. Twenty-one days means the device becomes invisible—you just live your life and it records it. That's when the tracking actually works.
The Buds 6 were designed using data from 1,000 ear models. That's oddly specific.
It's not odd at all. It's the difference between earbuds that fall out after an hour and ones you can wear all day. If you're trying to build something people will actually use, you have to know the shape of the problem first.
Does monitoring all this data actually make people healthier?
That's the real question, isn't it? The devices give you information. What you do with it is up to you. Some people see their sleep data and actually change their bedtime. Others just watch the numbers and feel guilty. The technology is neutral. The outcome depends on the person.