Magic Keyboard for 12.9in iPad Pro
Price: £349 from fave.co/2YQiLMi
Apple’s keyboard cases for the iPad tend to emphasize protection. The keyboard itself often feels like an afterthought. Even in the best cases, it comes off as a grudging concession to those of us who really don’t want to use the digital keyboard for long typing sessions.
But Apple’s new Magic Keyboard for iPad Pro is the first one that actually feels as though you were meant
to work on it. The backlit keys have great key travel, and they’re wide enough to recall the ones you’ll find on a MacBook. These features would have been impressive on their own, but Apple went a step further and included a trackpad and a dedicated charging port that greatly enriches the experience.
Taken together, these are signs that Apple is not only changing its ideas of what constitutes a good iPad keyboard case, but also in how the views the purpose of the iPad itself. For those of us who want to use Apple’s tablet in a workplace setting, that’s good news – although, as we’ll see, it comes with a hefty price.
As with the Smart Keyboard Folio before it, ‘installing’ the Magic Keyboard case involves nothing
more than slapping the iPad Pro on the strong magnets inside the case. It pairs instantly just by touching the Smart Connector, so – unlike with a Bluetooth keyboard – you can already use it when you’re, say, entering your Wi-Fi password while setting up a brand-new iPad Pro.
The real improvements, though, appear once you open the case all the way. With the Smart Keyboard Folio, you simply propped the iPad into one of two grooves, which didn’t allow for a lot of options for viewing angles. The Magic Keyboard, though, features a system of two hinges that makes the iPad ‘float’ about an inch above the keyboard, allowing you to tilt the screen until it settles into the perfect viewing angle. It’s quite sturdy. Apple has released an ad depicting
a hummingbird tilting the display backward just by tapping it, but in my experience it’s going to take a bit more force than that.
I’d go so far as to say that I like this kind of display arrangement more than the traditional laptop layout option, were it not for the fact that my fingers sometimes bump into the underside of the iPad while I’m typing. If you have big hands, it’s something you’ll want to watch out for.
Nor does Apple limit the hinge to one job, as you can also charge the iPad itself through the USB-C/ Thunderbolt 3 port on the left end of the largest one. You can’t use this port for anything else, but fortunately it frees up the USB-C port on the tablet itself so you
can hook up all the external drives, cameras and other devices now supported with iPadOS.
This is all great news for anyone who’s been wanting to use their iPad Pro more like a laptop. It’s not an ideal case, though, if you’re an artist or frequent Apple Pencil note-taker. Because of the hinges and the need for balance, the Magic Keyboard case only opens to a specific angle, as the other hinge handles the actual tilting. As a result, there’s technically no ‘drawing board’ orientation for this case, although you can find a few examples of users sort of making it work online. It looks dorky, to be sure, but at least it’s an option. At the very least, you can easily take it out of the case.
Keys to success
But most people are more likely to be excited by the keyboard itself – aside, that is, from the lack of any kind of ‘function’ keys above the number keys. Such keys are all but standard on most third-party iPad keyboards as they’re handy for dimming the backlit keys (which is a massive pain here that involves a trip into the Settings app), and it’s odd to see this extra row missing on a device from the same company that gave us the Touch Bar. I would have imagined that if any company would understand the conveniences of that extra row, it would be Apple.
The actual keys go a long way toward making up for it. They’re big, backlit and they feel a lot like the keys on a MacBook, which is a welcome switch from the strange, nearly flat canvas-covered keys on the iPad Pro. Without exaggeration, it’s the best typing experience I’ve ever experienced on an iPad keyboard from Apple
– or any other company, for that matter. I like it so much that I find myself wishing Apple’s normal, standalone Bluetooth Magic Keyboard was a bit more like this.
The real star of the Magic Keyboard is the small, two by four-inch clickable trackpad perched below the keyboard, which greatly improves the experience of using an iPad in its ‘laptop’ orientation. Want to head back to the home screen at any time? Just swipe up with your three of your fingers and you’re done. Want to scroll through all of your apps from the home screen? Swipe left or right with two of your fingertips
Because a trackpad so neatly allows for the recreation of many of iPadOS’s core gestures, I already find it more useful than I do on my Mac. (This may be