Will there EVER be a chance of an iPad Pro which can run both iOS and OSX? As in it running iOS when not docked with a keyboard and the option to run either when it is docked?
*HOPING*
*HOPING*
Will there EVER be a chance of an iPad Pro which can run both iOS and OSX? As in it running iOS when not docked with a keyboard and the option to run either when it is docked?
*HOPING*
If consumers (on net) truly valued an iPad with OS X over the current separation of MacBook/iMac + iPad, then Apple would be able to sell this fabled device at quite a premium (not just $500).Nope. You can count on there never being an OS X iPad. How can I promise this? Easy. Look at the iPod touch for answers.
As technology has advanced, the iPod touch has had the capability of replacing the iPhone as a phone device. The iPod touch could easily be used as a wifi enabled phone device using VOIP but Apple purposely blocks it from being possible.
WHY???
Because it would take away from iPhone sales. The same would apply to the iPad. The technology is finally there to where the iPad could run OS X. We all know the mobile processors are now more powerful than what laptop processors were out 5 years ago and they are catching up to current processors at exponential increases in performance.
However, If customers could spend $500 for a device that replaces their $799-$1399 laptop, then customers stop purchasing those laptops and sales decline.
Apple is pretty strategic. They market the iPad and iPad Pro as devices that can "do anything" and even want you to think that they are professional, but then they limit them just enough to make customers still want a laptop/desktop to do the heavy lifting for certain tasks.
Don't believe me, just ask anyone with a degree in business if it would be a smart idea for Apple to provide a $500 device that can replace their high end computers.
Nope. You can count on there never being an OS X iPad. How can I promise this? Easy. Look at the iPod touch for answers.
As technology has advanced, the iPod touch has had the capability of replacing the iPhone as a phone device. The iPod touch could easily be used as a wifi enabled phone device using VOIP but Apple purposely blocks it from being possible.
WHY???
Because it would take away from iPhone sales. The same would apply to the iPad. The technology is finally there to where the iPad could run OS X. We all know the mobile processors are now more powerful than what laptop processors were out 5 years ago and they are catching up to current processors at exponential increases in performance.
However, If customers could spend $500 for a device that replaces their $799-$1399 laptop, then customers stop purchasing those laptops and sales decline.
Apple is pretty strategic. They market the iPad and iPad Pro as devices that can "do anything" and even want you to think that they are professional, but then they limit them just enough to make customers still want a laptop/desktop to do the heavy lifting for certain tasks.
Don't believe me, just ask anyone with a degree in business if it would be a smart idea for Apple to provide a $500 device that can replace their high end computers.
Therein lies the interesting part. There were rumors (not very legit though) that Apple was tinkering with the idea of having a 2 chip hybrid device so for the iOS side, it would have the usual arm based chip. But when you wanted to use OS X, it would switch over to a core M chip like the one found in the retina MacBook.There is also a technological reason not to create a iPad that runs OS X. The iPad uses ARM-based processors that are based on an architecture totally different from Intel's x86 architecture. That means every OS X app would have to be recompiled for ARM. Microsoft tried this approach somewhat with Windows RT (originally known as "Windows for ARM") and was not successful. And speaking of Windows, how would you run "traditional" Windows on an iPad the same way you can run it on a Mac via Bootcamp?
Therein lies the interesting part. There were rumors (not very legit though) that Apple was tinkering with the idea of having a 2 chip hybrid device so for the iOS side, it would have the usual arm based chip. But when you wanted to use OS X, it would switch over to a core M chip like the one found in the retina MacBook.
It's a cool idea and I wouldn't be surprised if Apple experimented with it. But I doubt anything would ever come of it
Even Microsoft hasn't tried to build such a machine. Maybe one day technology will advance enough to make such a thing feasible, but my guess is not anytime soon. By that time, it's likely iOS and OS X have advanced to the point they wouldn't be known by those names anymore.
I'm just asking, because ive been away from anything beyond Windows 7, but don't most Windows 8 or 10 computers and tablets have the full Windows OS, but they also have a "tablet mode" where everything is more for touch interface? My friend was telling me about it but I don't know any more than that.
The iPad is their idea of the future of computing and they've built the platform with that in mind.
Windows 10 definitely does this. However, bear in mind that the Surface Pro and similar "tablets" use laptop processors from Intel (mainly the Intel Core i Series). That effects the real battery life of those devices and requires most of those devices to have an internal fan.What Microsoft did is write a single operating system that includes a desktop mode and a tablet mode. The post I was responding to was suggesting that Apple could make a tablet that dual boots OS X and iOS. Totally different idea. As Ghost31 pointed out, in order to dual boot, the device would need two separate chips. If you were running a desktop program, and you decided you wanted to run a tablet app, you would have to shut down the desktop and reboot into tablet mode. Windows 8 and 10 basically lets you run desktop and tablet apps side by side. Or at least, 10 does, and I believe 8.1 also does. I'm not sure what the situation was back in 8.0 -- the less said about that, the better!
Oh gotcha. But on the dual chip part, theoretically though, could iOS be run on the inter core M chip? I'm not experienced in the developer market either, but can iOS emulation be ran on macs for testing as well? Or is ios completely dedicated to ARM-only?What Microsoft did is write a single operating system that includes a desktop mode and a tablet mode. The post I was responding to was suggesting that Apple could make a tablet that dual boots OS X and iOS. Totally different idea. As Ghost31 pointed out, in order to dual boot, the device would need two separate chips. If you were running a desktop program, and you decided you wanted to run a tablet app, you would have to shut down the desktop and reboot into tablet mode. Windows 8 and 10 basically lets you run desktop and tablet apps side by side. Or at least, 10 does, and I believe 8.1 also does. I'm not sure what the situation was back in 8.0 -- the less said about that, the better!
I'm not experienced in the developer market either, but can iOS emulation be ran on macs for testing as well?
Nope. You can count on there never being an OS X iPad. How can I promise this? Easy. Look at the iPod touch for answers.
As technology has advanced, the iPod touch has had the capability of replacing the iPhone as a phone device. The iPod touch could easily be used as a wifi enabled phone device using VOIP but Apple purposely blocks it from being possible.
Windows 10 is a step up from Windows 8.1 in some ways, but it's just so damn schizophrenic.
Or at least, 10 does, and I believe 8.1 also does. I'm not sure what the situation was back in 8.0 -- the less said about that, the better!
Apple has always dragged people into the future kicking and screaming.
Nope. You can count on there never being an OS X iPad. How can I promise this? Easy. Look at the iPod touch for answers.
As technology has advanced, the iPod touch has had the capability of replacing the iPhone as a phone device. The iPod touch could easily be used as a wifi enabled phone device using VOIP but Apple purposely blocks it from being possible.
WHY???
Because it would take away from iPhone sales. The same would apply to the iPad. The technology is finally there to where the iPad could run OS X. We all know the mobile processors are now more powerful than what laptop processors were out 5 years ago and they are catching up to current processors at exponential increases in performance.
However, If customers could spend $500 for a device that replaces their $799-$1399 laptop, then customers stop purchasing those laptops and sales decline.
Apple is pretty strategic. They market the iPad and iPad Pro as devices that can "do anything" and even want you to think that they are professional, but then they limit them just enough to make customers still want a laptop/desktop to do the heavy lifting for certain tasks.
Don't believe me, just ask anyone with a degree in business if it would be a smart idea for Apple to provide a $500 device that can replace their high end computers.