HWM (Singapore)

ABeTsatbFl­ertie'sn d

Apple Magic Keyboard for iPad Pro

- By Kenny Yeo

Let’s address the elephant in the room first. The Magic Keyboard is expensive. It’s $439 for the 11-inch model and $519 for the 12.9-inch model. For that kind of money, these keyboards had better be magical. So, are they? Well, it’s a bit dishearten­ing that it’s made out of the soft-touch rubber material like the Smart Keyboard Folio. I’m sceptical of softtouch rubber because I have had many bad experience­s with other devices with similar housings that have degraded and become sticky over time. Fortunatel­y, this hasn’t happened to any of my older Smart Keyboard Folios.

There are upsides to this. Compared

Magic Keyboard adds about 6mm and 700g of heft and weight, bringing the total package to about 12mm and 1.34kg.

The iPad Pro docks magnetical­ly to Magic Keyboard via the Smart Connector so there’s no need for any pairing, charging, or fussing about. Just attach it in place and you’re ready to rock and roll. Unlike the Smart Keyboard Folio, the Magic Keyboard has what Apple calls a “floating cantilever” design, which consists of two hinges, that keeps the iPad Pro floating above the keyboard and enables the user to adjust the tilt of the iPad Pro.

This is incredibly useful as it addresses the older Smart Keyboard Folio’s lack of adjustabil­ity. The angle of adjustment isn’t actually too great – I reckon it’s around 30 to 40 degrees

– but it provides more flexibilit­y. What impressed me most was how well the Magic Keyboard was put together. Not only is there no flopping around, the angle of tilt didn’t budge even if I shook the keyboard around. And the magnets holding the iPad Pro in place were so strong you can adjust the tilt angle simply by tilting the iPad Pro.

The downside is that the Magic Keyboard cannot fold flat onto itself. This means you can’t use the iPad Pro as a tablet when it’s attached to the Magic Keyboard. You have to remove it first, which can be bothersome.

Incorporat­ed within the left side of the hinge is a USB-C port for pass-through charging. For heavy iPad Pro users, this frees up the USB-C port on the iPad

Pro itself for other things like an external display or a USB-C hub. The right side of the hinge is bare and looks like it could have been the perfect spot to incorporat­e some sort of storage for the Apple Pencil.

Unlike the Smart Keyboard Folio, the keys on the Magic Keyboard uses a scissors-switch mechanism just like on the keyboard in the new 16-inch MacBook Pro and MacBook Air. They have 1mm of travel, backlit keys, and even a trackpad to take advantage of the new trackpad and mouse support in iPadOS 13.4.

The best thing I can say about the Magic Keyboard is that typing on it feels like typing on 16inch MacBook Pro or the just-announced MacBook Air. Keycaps are black and are genuinely full-sized; legends use the same clean San Francisco font that the MacBook Magic Keyboard uses, which allows the backlight to shine through without backlight bleed either. The layout of the keys is identical to the one on the MacBooks too. The only thing to note insofar as the layout is concerned is that there are no function keys, no media shortcut keys, and no Esc key.

The trackpad is not as large as those on MacBooks, but it’s

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Singapore