iPad&iPhone user

With iPadOS, Apple’s dream of replacing laptops finally looks like a reality

With iPadOS, you can feel better about leaving the MacBook behind.

- Leif Johnson reports

As recently as last month we could still look at the iPad and smirk at Apple’s dogged insistence that its tablet works as a laptop replacemen­t – one that will even leave us asking questions like, “What’s a computer?” The power was certainly there – especially in latter-day models – but not the freedom.

I know this all too well. For over a year I used an iPad as my main work device, but I crawled back to the Mac after enduring months of unusable thumb drives at press trips and frustratio­ns springing from actions as simple as selecting text. At WWDC, though, Apple dashed away most of my concerns with a masterstro­ke that it’s calling iPadOS.

Currently, the Mac Pro is stealing much of iPadOS’s thunder, but months from now I believe we’ll find that Apple’s ‘new’ operating system left the bigger impact. Granted, I haven’t had a chance to handle iPadOS just yet, but everything I’ve seen so far suggests it’ll transform the iPad into the laptop replacemen­t Apple has always wanted it to be, even while retaining – no, improving – the features that set it apart from devices like Microsoft’s Surface tablet.

I’m willing to entertain the idea that these changes make it a better buy than a MacBook for some profession­als. Oh, you can find some people who claim they already feel that way – that it’s just suited to a different type of workflow – but their defences tend to sag under the weight of excuses. With the changes, though, even I’m looking forward to leaving my MacBook Pro behind for a change in favour of taking just my tablet, its keyboard case, and the ever-so-portable Magic Mouse.

Free from its bonds

With iPadOS, there’s far less of a need to make excuses. Apple eliminated many of the frustratio­ns that have dogged the tablet’s standing as a true work device for years. The biggest one wasn’t even mentioned in

Apple’s keynote. Instead, it was found lurking under Accessibil­ity in the Settings app by developer Steve Troughton-Smith. At last, he found, the iPad Pro now comes with mouse support with a feature Apple is calling “Assistive Touch”. You’ll have to deal with a hideous cursor, but hey, you can use both USB and Bluetooth mice ranging from the Magic Mouse and Magic Trackpad to fancier peripheral­s such as the Logitech G502.

That alone is enough to make it a laptop replacemen­t for many. Nothing slowed down my old iPad workflow quite so much as the need to hold my finger down on text to select it. The process takes a lot longer than it would with a mouse, and even Apple’s

Toby Paterson inadverten­tly demonstrat­ed its fiddly nature when he struggled to select a word on an iPad for several seconds during Apple’s keynote. At the very least, it allows us to work without our hands or arms blocking the screen.

It’s enough to make the iPad feel more like a Mac. I’ve often wondered if Apple hadn’t brought features such as mouse support to the iPad because it was worried about killing off the non-profession­al MacBook user base. If so, actions like this prove that it’s no longer worried or that it feels these concerns are no longer relevant.

Take the new home screen interface, which now looks more like a traditiona­l desktop. Apple squashed

all those huge spaces in-between apps, for one, which means you’ll be able to cram all your essential apps on the new screen. But Apple also lets you keep widgets in view on the home screen as well, and so lets you see what’s next on your calendar without swiping over to a different screen.

It also acts more like a traditiona­l laptop. You can now use USB memory sticks with an iPad, and you can import data from those drives directly into the Files app. It’s the logical extension of the new iPads Pros’ ability to import data directly from digital cameras through their USB-C port, although with iOS 12 you can only import photos (and then you could only import them to the Photos app). Now, though, you can use these files with all kinds of apps.

Apple even paid attention to the little details as it improved the Files app, so that it now supports a Column view with detailed informatio­n about specific files. You’ll also get options for sharing files or saving them as PDFs, and you can share entire folders with both other iOS users and even PC users. We can also finally use Safari on the iPad exclusivel­y in ‘desktop’ mode, which eliminates frustratio­ns while trying to work with interfaces that hide key elements when working on the mobile version of a site. According to Apple, this will even work with the highly complex, multi-featured web versions of services such as Google Docs.

A nice extra touch that shows that Apple is committed to helping its users get the most out of their devices, you’ll also be able to use your iPad as a second display for your Mac and as a stand-in Wacom tablet once macOS Catalina drops.

Making good things better

Most of those features have been on the Mac for years, but it’d be a gross oversimpli­fication to dismiss iPadOS as a way of porting macOS to a tablet. iPadOS greatly improves the iPad without sacrificin­g its identity. Even though Apple removed a lot of the iPad’s frustratio­ns by giving them Mac-like designs, it also strengthen­ed some of its tablet’s signature features.

We can especially see this in the changes to SplitView multitaski­ng. As a journalist, I’ve long found Split View helpful because it lets me keep my draft open in one window while I keep my reference document open in another. Unfortunat­ely, I always had to effectivel­y redo the Split View setup when I wanted to look at something from another document or app.

Now, though, Apple lets us have multiple Split View windows, all of which are browsable through Exposé. To expand on my example, that means I could open one Split View window in which I pair a writing app such as iA Writer with Safari while opening another in which I pair iA Writer with a PDF document. This particular setup also works because Apple finally lets us use documents from the same app for both windows.

Similar changes appear in the iPad’s related Slide Over windows, which hover on the right or left sides of the screen when you don’t want to force the display into Split View. With iPadOS, you can access multiple Slide Over windows through an interface that’s reminiscen­t of the app switcher on the iPhone, and you easily swipe between them with the help of a bar along the bottom of their windows.

Here’s a caveat: a lot of its effectiven­ess will depend on support from third-party developers. Plenty of apps support Split View, of course, but the widely used Google Docs infamously didn’t add the feature for months after it had already appeared on virtually every other writing app on the App Store.

Apple also maintains the iPad’s identity by making improvemen­ts to interactio­ns when you’re holding it like a notepad. At its simplest, it lets you access a small sidescreen keyboard that works a lot like the onehanded keyboards on devices like the iPhone XS Max. It’s a good workaround for the common long-existing problem of having too big of a keyboard to type on when your other hand is busy holding the tablet itself.

Apple also announced improvemen­ts for the Apple Pencil that emphasize its utility outside the usual focus

on drawing. For instance, you can trigger Markup at any time by swiping up with the Pencil from a corner of the display, which will then produce an editable screenshot. That makes it even more useful for adding annotation­s to photos, emails, or even web pages, especially now that Markup can capture a web page’s or document’s entire content rather than just the immediatel­y visible screen. Convenienc­e informs many of the new changes, right down to the ability to move the colour palette for the Pencil around on the Notes screen.

The Pencil will probably even write better, as Apple improved the latency from 20ms all the way down to 9ms. Hopefully that will make it write more like

a regular pen or pencil, which should improve the likelihood that profession­als will use the Pencils for taking handwritte­n notes rather than simple tasks such as highlighti­ng.

Finally, for all my excitement about the hush-hush mouse support, I’m happy to report that Apple also didn’t neglect the touch controls. With iPadOS, you can select whole swathes of text just by swiping your finger over them, which would have been a godsend for my workflow a few years ago. Moving the cursor works much the same, and additional three-finger gestures allow you to cut and paste. Federighi made it look easy (by showing the feature through a video on stage), but Toby Paterson’s struggle with word selection a few minutes later makes me wonder how well it will work in practice.

More than padding

The upshot of all this is that iPadOS will significan­tly change how we use our iPads in the coming years. It’s now got the interface as well as the power to support people who want to use it with ‘pro’ apps like the upcoming full release of Adobe Photoshop. It’s a massive leap forward, and it came faster than I expected, especially considerin­g the minimal improvemen­ts Apple was making over the past couple of iOS releases.

It’s the biggest change to the iPad experience ever, and it’ll be a winner for users who like to use the same device for working at a desk and reading through content while lazing on a sofa. It’s still not perfect: I suspect I’ll still prefer even the typing experience of the

MacBook’s ‘butterfly’ keyboards over the stiff typing I endure with the iPad Pro’s Smart Keyboard Folio. For that reason alone, it’s far too early to see iPadOS as some kind of death knell for the MacBook.

It feels as though it’s part of a wider shift at Apple – one in which the firm is finally giving serious thought to the frustratio­ns and workflows of people who use their devices on a daily basis. Both iPadOS and the Mac Pro are far more robust releases than I would have expected even a year ago. It shows us an Apple that’s willing to move away from its own little oddities and embrace the demands needed to meet an increasing­ly competitiv­e market. At the very least, it’s a sign that Apple is making sure its ‘pro’ products live up to that name.

We’re impressed, Apple. But with all those other improvemen­ts to the iPad, you seriously couldn’t have added a built-in Calculator app?

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