You are wrong until Apple makes a tablet Mac. That’s how it works around here. The iPad shall not be questioned!!!!!
I’ve had my 11” iPad Pro since December — about four months now. Now that I’ve put it through its paces, I think I can say confidently that this is a very disappointing product.
I bought it with 512 GB of storage, the M2 processor, 8 GB of RAM, the cellular radio and the Magic Keyboard. For a product at this price point, it is a terrible laptop. I can definitely see the value of a $300 or $400 iPad as an entertainment toy. It’s great at downloading movies for playback while on long flights. But at the price of the iPad Pro, it’s well into laptop territory, as is the hardware capabilities… but it badly disappoints.
I’m not sure where to begin, but the Safari browser is very weak, and so is text selection and editing. Select/copy/paste works so-so on the iPhone, but on a platform like iPad Pro, I should have no difficulty selecting text for copy/paste. But it doesn’t work well on this platform. I downloaded Microsoft Office, and found its performance is fairly slow. I tried brining in RAW photos from my camera for editing with Adobe Lightroom, and it was close to unusable, especially compared to using my MacBook Pro. I tried using it as a slideshow player for my digital photos, and that hasn’t worked out too well. I tried using it with my Magic Mouse, but the scrolling feature of the mouse doesn’t work; I can’t slide my finger on top of the mouse to scroll a window.
I think this system needs to be MacOS with touchscreen support, instead of iPhone OS with keyboard support. As I said, i can see the attraction at the $300-$400 level, but in a $1,000-ish product, I should be able to get at least the same productivity as a laptop. MS Windows has plenty of touchscreen laptops; it’s basically Windows with a touchscreen mouse. Personally, I don’t see much future for the iPad Pro if they’re only going to be large screen iPhones.
Agree with most of this. Only point of contention is an iPad and an iPhone are two separate things for me. I use an iPhone to make phone calls, send quick emails and when traveling doing some browsing. The iPad is for browsing and viewing movies when I do not want to carry any of my macs. I feel many apple fans today see using the iPhone to make phone calls as unimportant or a "toy" as the OP would say. Without wishing to appear too pedantic, I suggest the OP should set their spellcheck on, no matter which hardware they use.The purpose of the iPad is not to be a laptop replacement. It isn’t and will likely never be. For one, why would Apple cannibalize its own sales not to mention that the keyboard and mouse can never be truly integrated like a laptop.
The purpose of the iPad is casual computing where the technology is so seamless that it disappears. The point is that for certain tasks, it’s not that they be done better or faster than on a laptop but that they can be done while sitting in an armchair or in the cockpit.
Also, the iPad is great at single task uses such as controlling hardware through an app, content consumption and ForeFlight.
For your use case, it’s never going to work. This is common. Stop trying to make it a laptop, it’s not one. Instead, see this for what it is, a large iPhone with a faster processor. You may not see the value at the crazy price points and in that case, you should sell it.
This highlights what Apple fails to communicate, which is that the iPad Pro has Pro hardware but not pro-software.I think this system needs to be MacOS with touchscreen support, instead of iPhone OS with keyboard support. As I said, i can see the attraction at the $300-$400 level, but in a $1,000-ish product, I should be able to get at least the same productivity as a laptop.
Completely off topic, but what's the Surface like for serious lightroom classic editing using touch and stylus? What about Photoshop?Definitely not the device for you. I have no problems with RAW images and Lightroom on my M1 12.9 and my Logitech MX Master 3 mouse works well with it. I also have an MS Surface pro 7 but much prefer the iPad as a touch device.
This is the best value for money: M1, M2 or M3 MacBook + 2-4 year iPad.Alameda, I completely understand your point of view. There are a lot of things that people do that are simply better on a laptop. In your situation you should have a laptop and then an inexpensive iPad, that combination sounds like it would work perfect for you.
Interesting that you should mention that. I'm a father of two kids do a lot of computing on the phone too.I’m in a completely different boat than most people, right now I do 99% of my computing through my iPhone 13 Pro Max. So I’m going to buy an iPad just to make it a little bit easier by having more screen real estate. For that one percent of work that I need a computer, I’ll use my older laptop.
Completely off topic, but what's the Surface like for serious lightroom classic editing using touch and stylus? What about Photoshop?
I am an electrical contractor and I run my entire business off of my iPhone. Estimates, invoices, bookkeeping, everything.This is the best value for money: M1, M2 or M3 MacBook + 2-4 year iPad.
Interesting that you should mention that. I'm a father of two kids do a lot of computing on the phone too.
I’m really sorry that the iPad Pro series doesn’t feel like it’s for you. There are so many people that find it to be the perfect laptop replacement and there’s people that don’t everybody’s needs are different so I’m really sorry to hear that but I hope you enjoy your MacbookproI’ve had my 11” iPad Pro since December — about four months now. Now that I’ve put it through its paces, I think I can say confidently that this is a very disappointing product.
I bought it with 512 GB of storage, the M2 processor, 8 GB of RAM, the cellular radio and the Magic Keyboard. For a product at this price point, it is a terrible laptop. I can definitely see the value of a $300 or $400 iPad as an entertainment toy. It’s great at downloading movies for playback while on long flights. But at the price of the iPad Pro, it’s well into laptop territory, as is the hardware capabilities… but it badly disappoints.
I’m not sure where to begin, but the Safari browser is very weak, and so is text selection and editing. Select/copy/paste works so-so on the iPhone, but on a platform like iPad Pro, I should have no difficulty selecting text for copy/paste. But it doesn’t work well on this platform. I downloaded Microsoft Office, and found its performance is fairly slow. I tried brining in RAW photos from my camera for editing with Adobe Lightroom, and it was close to unusable, especially compared to using my MacBook Pro. I tried using it as a slideshow player for my digital photos, and that hasn’t worked out too well. I tried using it with my Magic Mouse, but the scrolling feature of the mouse doesn’t work; I can’t slide my finger on top of the mouse to scroll a window.
I think this system needs to be MacOS with touchscreen support, instead of iPhone OS with keyboard support. As I said, i can see the attraction at the $300-$400 level, but in a $1,000-ish product, I should be able to get at least the same productivity as a laptop. MS Windows has plenty of touchscreen laptops; it’s basically Windows with a touchscreen mouse. Personally, I don’t see much future for the iPad Pro if they’re only going to be large screen iPhones.
I completely understand that I believe that some people like macOS and I think there’s some people that like Using an iPad you definitely have to find other ways to do things that you’re used to on macOS sometimes it’s easier and sometimes it takes a few more steps. I feel like some of those things are getting easier and easier to do, but I know that there will never come a day where they put macOS on an iPad because then Apple would have to retire the iPad and they may as well just call it the MacBook tablet and I don’t think that will ever happenI don’t think Windows is a better system, I was just pointing out that adding touch screen support to a desktop OS isn’t a big deal. I find that a lot of operations are far slower on the iPad than they are on my MacBook Pro, even though they use the same CPU.
Yes, this is exactly my point: “It has all this power but does nothing that a $349 iPad can’t do extremely well.”You’re correct the iPad Pro is a joke. It has all this power but does nothing that a $349 iPad can’t do extremely well.
I thought that a “Pro” machine with the same specs as my laptop would be able to perform as well as my laptop. And I don’t think it’s even close.Why did you buy iPad if you need laptop/desktop class environment? Out or boredom?
Yes, this is exactly my point: “It has all this power but does nothing that a $349 iPad can’t do extremely well.”
The purpose of the iPad is not to be a laptop replacement. It isn’t and will likely never be. For one, why would Apple cannibalize its own sales not to mention that the keyboard and mouse can never be truly integrated like a laptop.
The purpose of the iPad is casual computing where the technology is so seamless that it disappears. The point is that for certain tasks, it’s not that they be done better or faster than on a laptop but that they can be done while sitting in an armchair or in the cockpit.
Also, the iPad is great at single task uses such as controlling hardware through an app, content consumption and ForeFlight.
For your use case, it’s never going to work. This is common. Stop trying to make it a laptop, it’s not one. Instead, see this for what it is, a large iPhone with a faster processor. You may not see the value at the crazy price points and in that case, you should sell it.
Tim wants you to buy both a mac and an iPad. Not one device that can do bothReally?
So Microsoft is so much smarter than Apple that they can do it but Apple’s engineers are just too doggone dumb to pull it off?
Apple makes over one billion dollars a day. Surely it’s “no big deal” for a company of that size.
Really?
So Microsoft is so much smarter than Apple that they can do it but Apple’s engineers are just too doggone dumb to pull it off?
Apple makes over one billion dollars a day. Surely it’s “no big deal” for a company of that size.
The Surface Pros do not have the graphics power that more traditional laptops can deliver (integrated graphics vs discreet GPUs), due to the casing not being large enough to handle the heat and the battery not large enough to handle the extra power. (otherwise, the tablet will be huge). Surface Pros are nice tablets, but they can't compete with a traditional laptop. Look at the Surface Studio laptop. It does have the juice to compete with a traditional laptop, but when it folds into "tablet" mode - its HUGE.
The same goes for iPads. iPads will never replace MacBooks because an iPad just can't have the graphics power of a 40 core GPU with a large battery.
iPads are not MacBooks and never will be, even if they open up the software, like Microsoft did with Surface.
And there are those of us who are in between the two poles— as in “I like my iPad Pro and what it does but gosh, it would sure be nice if it ran my macOS apps when docked with the Magic Keyboard.” 😊I feel for you. This is an old conversation which polarises opinion and usually runs for dozens of pages. One one side we have the "I can do more with a ten year old laptop than an iPad Pro because the OS sucks and is holding the hardware back" camp, and on the other side we have the "I don't want a touchscreen macOS on my tablet, I like it just the way it is" camp. The two camps never ever agree.
I'm in the former camp, which is why I've only ever bought the cheapest iPads. iPad pros would for me be a complete waste of money that I could still only really use for content-consumption like the cheapest iPad, because the OS does not lend itself to tasks I would normally use a computer for.