Trying to see if any of you have tried something I stumbled upon last night while setting up my new iPad mini 6:
My main desktop setup is the two Macs you see in my signature (15" is work, M1 is personal) and I hot swap them in and out as needed. They're both paired with all my peripherals via my LG UltraFine monitor.
Last night I wanted to use my third Logitech MX bluetooth profile for my new iPad, and had completely forgotten that iPadOS has full blown mouse support. So I plugged it in to the monitor, set up the bluetooth pairings, and then realized that with the Logitech MX mouse having the little gesture pad on the side, I now have essentially a giant iPad Pro without the touch screen if I ever want to use my iPad mini that way.
This is a completely unintended use case that I had absolutely not considered when deciding to purchase the device. I really just want it as an e-reader, note taker, TV watcher, etc, but since it's really just a tiny, somewhat souped up iPad Air, I feel like I accidentally stumbled into the best of both worlds.
Anyone else come to that realization? Is there a pitfall here I'm not considering? (other than the ugly black bars on the screen) I can see myself doing this from time to time as needed, as I used to work almost full time from an iPad Pro. This would be more for in a pinch, but it's still nice to know it's there. USB-C is really changing the way I work now that it's on most Apple devices.
My main desktop setup is the two Macs you see in my signature (15" is work, M1 is personal) and I hot swap them in and out as needed. They're both paired with all my peripherals via my LG UltraFine monitor.
Last night I wanted to use my third Logitech MX bluetooth profile for my new iPad, and had completely forgotten that iPadOS has full blown mouse support. So I plugged it in to the monitor, set up the bluetooth pairings, and then realized that with the Logitech MX mouse having the little gesture pad on the side, I now have essentially a giant iPad Pro without the touch screen if I ever want to use my iPad mini that way.
This is a completely unintended use case that I had absolutely not considered when deciding to purchase the device. I really just want it as an e-reader, note taker, TV watcher, etc, but since it's really just a tiny, somewhat souped up iPad Air, I feel like I accidentally stumbled into the best of both worlds.
Anyone else come to that realization? Is there a pitfall here I'm not considering? (other than the ugly black bars on the screen) I can see myself doing this from time to time as needed, as I used to work almost full time from an iPad Pro. This would be more for in a pinch, but it's still nice to know it's there. USB-C is really changing the way I work now that it's on most Apple devices.