First, what size iPP? 9.7" or 12.9"?
I have the first gen Samsung TabPro S. It's form factor is slightly smaller than the 12.9" iPP, includes a keyboard cover with trackpad, and has pen support (though it's a bluetooth pen on this model). It a full Windows 10 tablet and for productivity, offers you everything Windows is capable off. It has a beautiful, high-res OLED display and pretty good battery life.
That tablet's sequel(s) are set to be released sometime over the next few months I believe--the Galaxy Book models (10" and 12").
I'd also consider the new Samsung Chromebooks (Plus and Pro). They aren't traditional tablets per se, but hybrids with a tablet style format and an onboard stylus. Chrome OS with Android apps, if it they work well (jury still out on this) it a pretty compelling setup, IMO.
I'm thinking 10 inches or under. Should've mentioned that in the first post.
How good would you say is "pretty good" in terms of battery?
Or is the iPad Pro the only such device at its price range?
I know there is the Surface lineup, but the battery life is a bit questionable on that.
EDIT: size is 10" or under.
If you are talking tablets and constricting yourself to a mobile OS, then Samsung is the only real competition. If you widen the window to include hybrids and full OS's, then Chromebooks and Surface hybrids are much more compelling, as they provide a real desktop environment that iOS simply can't do... Yet.Or is the iPad Pro the only such device at its price range?
I know there is the Surface lineup, but the battery life is a bit questionable on that.
EDIT: size is 10" or under.
I think if you have a mac then yes the use of the iCloud desktop feature would be good. I'm a consumption user and don't do any serious work on my tablets but if I did the lack of a file system would drive me nuts if I didn't have a mac. I think iCloud Drive somewhat negates the need for a file system but only really works if you have multiple Apple devices and a mac.And to be clear, I'm not wholly advocating the Samsung tablets I mentioned in lieu of the iPP. I own both a 9.7" and 12.9" version and do just about everything I need to do on a daily basis on them. My TabPro S barely gets a glance. My recommendations were solely from the point of view of getting something besides the iPP. I still recommend either of them as the best tablet experience available at the moment and yes, they can be used for serious work (depending on what you need them to do, of course).
your stylus is not like Samsung's S pen ?My LG G Pad F 8.0 tablet does have a S Pen BUT it lacks android customization (sp?) like Samsung and it is cheap. I must warn you it is underpowered tablet not just Samsung Galaxy Tab S3
View attachment 694312
your stylus is not like Samsung's S pen ?
This is pretty much the only alternative. Nobody else has put any effort at all into the tablet game in recent years except for apple and samsung.The new galaxy tab S3
Dex is already dead, but what has that got to do with the thread topic and that iPad Pro has the best hands down stylus integration?With the trend with phones getting 6"+ screens and features like DeX, tablets in 2017 will be deader than dead especially running iOS with training wheels.
Dex is already dead, but what has that got to do with the thread topic and that iPad Pro has the best hands down stylus integration?
The concept has been tried multiple times and never took off. Being a Samsung only solution doesn't help.How is DeX, which isn't even out yet, dead?
The concept has been tried multiple times and never took off. Being a Samsung only solution doesn't help.