I did; I read that people use the iPad Pro for RAW photo editing and even video editing. I’ve tried, and it was very difficult to do, compared to my MacBook Pro. Using MS Word is also much worse. But I don’t think your “blame the customer” attitude is appropriate.The weekly “iPad Pro needs MacOS” thread 🫠.
If you did any research at all before buying your iPad, then you would know whether or not it would fit your workflow. (If you didn’t and it was a gift? Why are you complaining, use it for what it does well and stick to your old workflow.)
Yes the iPad Pro and the whole iPad lineup in general has some flaws. Like some of the other comments I’ve seen, Apple’s limitations and restrictions are so frustrating and I’m excited to see how the DOJ lawsuit plays out.
You know there’s a reason why Apple doesn’t make the “What’s a computer” ads anymore right?
I have a disabled child, and I’ve bought her iPads for years. She’s happy with it, I’m happy that she enjoys it. I’m happy that there’s a platform my child can enjoy. My complaint is that a computer which has the same processor and memory as my MacBook Pro ought to perform a lot like my MacBook Pro, and this iPad doesn’t come close. Things like selecting text for copy/paste, the web browser, file management, controlling the sliders in Lightroom; it’s not a great productivity platform.
I recently bought an OWC Thunderbolt dock for my MacBook Pro. Now I’m very curious to see what happens when I plug the iPad Air into it… although I don’t intend to use the iPad that way, it will be interesting.