Gulf News

New iPad takes on the competitio­n

Now being pushed as educationa­l tool, new iPad works with the Pencil and supports Augmented Reality

- BY SCOTT SHUEY Business Editor

It’s been called the iPad for Kids, the iPad Air 3, and I’ve even heard it called the “budget iPad.” It’s not really any of those things.

If you want to get technical, you can call it the sixth generation iPad. Apple’s nomenclatu­re has been all over the board since the first iPad launched in 2010, but the company now seems to have settled on just the iPad and the iPad Pro.

Last week in Chicago, Apple introduced us to its new baseline iPad. Over the years the iPad has gotten thinner, lighter and a lot more powerful. It still has the standard 9.7 inch screen with Retina Display (2048x1536 resolution), however this version of the iPad doesn’t include lamination or anti-glare coating. Be prepared to wipe off a lot of fingerprin­ts.

The new version comes with the A10 Fusion chip running at 2.34 GHz, which is the same chip available in the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus. Apple says the A10 is 40 per cent faster than the A9 at processing (CPU), and 50 per cent faster when it comes to processing graphics. It’s not Apple’s fastest chip, but the only place to get the A11 chip so far is in the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus or the iPhone X. Even the iPad Pro only has the A10X chip, a second generation version of the A10.

The A10 is powerful enough for most of what you’re going to do on an iPad, and it’s fast enough for Apple’s Augmented Reality (AR) kit, which was one of Apple’s primary selling points during its Chicago event. Apple is hoping to convince educators this iPad has the specs to allow teachers to use AR in the classroom.

Smoother display

It does, but the AR can be a bit choppy at times, especially when moving around and zooming, which is pretty much the whole point of AR. The iPad Pro, on the other hand, gave a much smoother display.

Neither the standard iPad nor the Pro does particular well in lowlight situations with AR. Even in a well-lit office space in the evening, the AR refused to work on the same table it worked on just a few hours before. The only “flat surface” it would accept was the floor.

This is when you’d really love to see an A11 chip at work, but that would likely drive the iPad out of the target price range for students. This iPad in the UAE starts at Dh1,349, but schools can get a Dh55 discount. The iPhone 8 starts at Dh2,991.

Battery life

Another issue we’re assuming was a limiting factor to a higher processing speed was battery life. Apple is saying the new iPad will go 10 hours, which seems the bare minimum for students, who normally attend classes for 7 hours day. They’ll probably need to recharge to finish their homework.

This new iPad also supports the Apple Pencil, which so far has been a toy largely of artists and graphic designers, since it only worked with the iPad Pro. The Pencil isn’t cheap either, and I’m sure parents will be less than thrilled at the idea of giving their kids a Dh399 pencil. But it does allow the kids — or anyone — to doodle, draw or even makes annotated notes in some apps.

The iPad comes in two sizes: 32GB is standard, but for anyone who produces lots of media, there is also a 128GB version.

 ?? AP ?? A demonstrat­ion of the Froggipedi­a App using the Apple Pencil on the new 9.7-inch iPad is performed at an Apple educationa­l event at Lane Technical College Prep High School on March 27 in Chicago.
AP A demonstrat­ion of the Froggipedi­a App using the Apple Pencil on the new 9.7-inch iPad is performed at an Apple educationa­l event at Lane Technical College Prep High School on March 27 in Chicago.

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