iPad&iPhone user

Review: 12.9in iPad Pro

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Price: £969 from fave.co/3bAbp3k

Apple released the 2020 iPad Pro at a strange time. With the coronaviru­s pandemic in full swing around the world, the new tablet was announced with a simple press release rather than a big event. What we got appeared to be little more than a minor upgrade, gaining an extra camera and a LiDAR sensor, some more RAM (according to reports), a new(ish) chip and not a lot else.

The 2020 iPad Pro is the best iPad ever. It’s just that it was released at a time where there are more

important things in life to worry about. Now that I’ve acknowledg­ed this, let’s jump into a self-aware escapist review, shall we?

If it ain’t broke

Apple barely changed the design of the new iPad Pro from the 2018 generation that completely reinvented the look (read our iPad Pro 12.9in 2018 review for more on that model). This is a good thing. In either Space Grey or Silver, it’s a stunning piece of hardware with flat edges and rounded corners that recall the beloved iPhone 5 design.

That means there still isn’t a headphone jack and you get USB-C charging and connectivi­ty rather than Lightning. The 18-watt charger in the box is stingy of Apple, given the company’s 30-watt adaptor charges it up much faster.

The 120Hz 2,732x2,048 LCD is phenomenal and a pleasure to use in all but direct sunlight, where reflection­s become an issue. With peerless True Tone colour adjustment, this is easily the best tablet display you can get.

The A12Z Bionic chip is a small upgrade from the A12X in the 2018 Pros. It is still an eight-core chip, but it adds an additional GPU core, meaning the 2020 Pro has faster graphics processing. The CPU performanc­e is architectu­rally identical.

Performanc­e

The 2020 iPad Pro is ridiculous­ly fast. It hasn’t stuttered once even when I was switching between 10 or so different apps during a heavy work day. Whatever you throw at it, it seems the 6GB RAM helps no end in keeping things incredibly speedy, and Apple Arcade games look absolutely stunning on the large display as they process without a hint of lag.

Face ID is a revelation, like it was on the iPhone X. Here, it works both portrait and landscape, so you can still unlock or confirm your identity if you’re holding the iPad sideways or using it with a docked keyboard.

It also packs in five microphone­s for recording audio and the very good quad-speaker array from the previous Pro model.

Magic Keyboard

Apple announced a fancy Magic Keyboard for iPad Pro with a cantilever design that means the iPad is floating. It adds a backlit, scissor-switch keyboard and USB-C passthroug­h and is compatible with the 2018 models

too, but I couldn’t review it as it wasn’t available at the time of writing.

It’ll cost a pretty penny at £349 (£299 for the 11in) but will hopefully be a better typing experience than the still dear £199 (from fave.co/2zjJNRy) Smart Keyboard Folio that I have been using, with its odd fabric keys and shallow travel. Despite its typing shortcomin­gs, I do like that the Folio acts a really slim protective case when not in use.

You don’t have to get a keyboard case for the iPad Pro, but you probably should unless you’re a designer or artist who plans to use the iPad Pro with the second-generation Apple Pencil (£119 from fave.co/3bxXP0g). It remains an excellent input device for creatives and note-takers and charges magnetical­ly on the side of the iPad.

When the accessorie­s cost this much, you know the iPad itself is going to follow suit. It starts at £969 (the 11in model starts at £769) but it’s good to see the base storage at 128GB instead of 64GB.

My review unit is the 1TB model with cellular, which costs a staggering £1,619. I don’t need that much storage, but I recommend getting as much as you can afford to future-proof your purchase, with 256GB and 512GB good in-betweens.

I personally love the cellular feature and tend to run my second SIM through an iPad when I can. It makes searching for public Wi-Fi a thing of the past and it’s great, but I still recommend you get more storage if it’s a toss up between that or cellular.

Getting past the mental blocks

When you have all these pricing tiers and accessorie­s to consider before you even have the iPad Pro in your hands, no wonder it can seem like a silly idea. “Just buy a MacBook Air” people cry, “It has a keyboard built in!”

But this is to miss the point and the essence of the iPad Pro. The keyboard and Pencil are options because the product’s target market is people who do more than watch Netflix on their iPads, or people who want to use a stylus. Apple is trying to move the iPad Pro’s rhetoric from whether it should replace a laptop to considerin­g what its modular versatilit­y can bring to a wide range of profession­als. Its ‘Your next computer is not a computer’ ad is proof of this.

Like other reviewers, no doubt, I sat down with the iPad Pro at my desk, from which I had just cleared

my PC and Mac set-ups, and thought: “I’ll do a day’s work and see what goes wrong.” I quickly realized this is a reductive way to view the iPad Pro. It isn’t meant to jump in and mirror your PC or Mac’s workflow because it runs iPadOS (neé iOS), an app-based operating system without the granular file access offered by other platforms.

The point isn’t that you need to buy a keyboard and stylus to use the iPad Pro, it’s that it can be a fully functionin­g device with or without either of them. Its accessorie­s make it a chameleon of computing that can serve several different needs in a way a MacBook simply can’t.

I can binge TigerKing in bed with just the iPad after using the Measure app to line up a new framed print on the wall, or attach the keyboard to bash out a tedious spreadshee­t before doing an awful sketch of a cat.

Caught in the mousetrap

Just because the iPad Pro with a keyboard looks like a laptop, it doesn’t mean you should treat it as one. But Apple has dared to confuse us further with the full support of trackpad and mouse input with iPadOS 13.4, a software update that supports every iPad right back to the iPad Air 2.

I tested this out with Apple’s Smart Keyboard Folio and my Microsoft Surface Precision Mouse (a Magic Trackpad 2 wasn’t available for testing). Sitting down to word-process this review became far more bearable on the iPad thanks to the cursor control I gained. Being able to highlight text without touching the display is not only faster but mirrors the usual desktop experience. It made me so much faster at the task.

Using a mouse instead of the Magic Trackpad 2 means I couldn’t test full finger gestures that mirror on-screen ones, though these by all accounts make it so you don’t have to touch the display at all and lets you switch between apps and tasks quicker. The excellent versatilit­y of the iPad means you don’t have to do this, and can simply touch the display if you don’t have the peripheral­s.

Apple isn’t trying to make the iPad Pro a Mac by adding a trackpad, or conceding that the Mac is better. Rather, the company is making it easier for more people to get to grips with a wildly different OS by adopting a

familiar input method, and in the process highlighti­ng the unique modularity of the iPad Pro’s ecosystem. You can add what you want to make the experience work for you, but the core tablet is all you need to start with.

Evolving with AR

The only noticeable hardware difference from the 2018 iPad Pro is the camera module, which now features a 12Mp wide and a 10Mp ultra-wide lens. The latter is new, and opens up some extra photograph­y options for those who like to embarrass their children on holiday by using an iPad to take photos. Otherwise it’s mainly

there to work in tandem with the tiny LiDAR sensor that’s next to it. LiDAR stands for light detection and ranging and is most commonly used in topographi­cal mapping technology.

On the iPad Pro, and on some premium Android phones, it acts as a time of flight sensor to accurately tell the distance between camera and objects by bouncing light off it. It means that the Measure app is now more accurate and faster to load, and games like Hot Lava are able to anchor game elements better.

A front-facing 7Mp camera isn’t the best quality ever, but still trounces Apple’s MacBook webcams for

sharpness. Realistica­lly, though, the addition of the LiDAR sensor is marketing spiel – it feels like it’s there to cover up the fact that Apple really didn’t change much compared to the 2018 iPad Pro.

Software smarts

Aside from the trackpad support, iPadOS 13.4 is the iPad maturing. When you’re used to it, Split View and Slide Over are a doddle and after a couple of days away from my Mac I was into the iPad frame of mind.

Additions such as the Today view on the home screen show Apple is finally shifting its rigid stance on a grid of apps, while the same can be said of the functional­ity afforded by the app dock that makes multitaski­ng much faster and means you don’t have to return to the home screen constantly.

What software you use on the iPad Pro really depends what you’ll be using it for. Apple bundled the classic iWork suite of Pages, Numbers and Keynote, so

if you live in Apple’s ecosystem, you’re good to go for basic work tasks.

Of course, Google’s similar apps are free, but after that what you want to do on the iPad will probably mean spending money on some apps.

I feel that because the average person does not like to pay for apps on their phones they might look at an iPad like a big phone where software should also be free. But for a productivi­ty device like the iPad Pro, you really do have to spend a little to get the most out of it.

There is a plethora of amazingly good third-party iPad apps. I wrote this very review on iA Writer (£8.99 one-off payment from fave.co/2x18QIk), a distractio­nfree text editor designed for iPad that lets me work in different formats. It’s brilliant. It’s not free. Equally, apps such as Photoshop, Procreate, Things 3, Notability and Fantastica­l are good creative and productive apps, but will require a one-off or subscripti­on or payment.

If this doesn’t sound appealing, you might be better off with a MacBook where much of the action happens in a web browser for the average user. The iPad Pro is built on profession­al productivi­ty apps, and you will probably have to invest in that belief to get the most out of it. If not, you’ll get frustrated at its apparent shortcomin­gs if you try to use it for work.

That said, Netflix on it looks sumptuous.

Verdict

The iPad Pro is not a direct laptop replacemen­t. Rather, it can conceivabl­y replace your laptop if you have a workflow and attitude that allows it to. The best thing about how the iPad Pro has matured is its embrace of

the modular ecosystem. The iPad itself is the core, and you can add a trackpad, keyboard or monitor if you want to. Apple makes the tools, it’s up to you how you use them.

Many people will be better suited to a MacBook, and that’s fine. If you want the hardware versatilit­y, great battery life and cellular connectivi­ty of an iPad Pro, then take the jump. But you’ll have to be prepared to work for it in order to get used to a new way of getting things done. Henry Burrell

Specificat­ions

• 12.9in (2,732x2,048; 264ppi) LED-backlit Multi-Touch display with IPS technology

• iOS 13

• A12Z Bionic chip with 64-bit architectu­re

• Octa-core (4x 2.5GHz Vortex + 4x 1.6GHz Tempest)

CPU

• Apple GPU (8-core graphics)

• 6GB RAM

• 128/256/512GB/1TB storage

• Three rear-facing cameras: 12Mp, f/1.8, (wide), 1/3in, 1.22μm, dual pixel PDAF; 10Mp, f/2.4, 11mm (ultrawide); TOF 3D LiDAR scanner (depth)

• Selfie camera: 7Mp, f/2.2

• 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax Wi-Fi

• Bluetooth 5.0, A2DP, LE, EDR

• GPS with A-GPS, GLONASS, GALILEO, QZSS (Wi-Fi + Cellular model only)

• Face ID

• USB 3.1, Type-C 1.0 reversible connector; magnetic connector

• 280.6x214.9x5.9mm

• Wi-Fi models 641g; Wi-Fi and cellular models 643g

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The display is phenomenal and a pleasure to use
The display is phenomenal and a pleasure to use
 ??  ?? The Smart Keyboard Folio also acts as a slim protective case
The Smart Keyboard Folio also acts as a slim protective case
 ??  ?? You won’t need to buy a keyboard or stylus to use the iPad Pro
You won’t need to buy a keyboard or stylus to use the iPad Pro
 ??  ?? This photo was taken with the main lens…
This photo was taken with the main lens…
 ??  ?? …and this image was taken with the ultra-wide lens
…and this image was taken with the ultra-wide lens
 ??  ?? Selfie taken with the 7Mp front-facing camera
Selfie taken with the 7Mp front-facing camera
 ??  ?? The iPad Pro has matured its embrace of the modular ecosystem
The iPad Pro has matured its embrace of the modular ecosystem

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