• Apple A12X Bionic chip
• 11- or 12.9-inch Liquid Retina display with 264 ppi
• Up to 1 TB of storage
• 12 MP camera with f/1.8 aperture and 4K video capture at 60 fps
• Face ID with TrueDepth Camera
• Quad stereo speakers
• USB-C connector
The latest iPad Pro is the tech giant’s most radically redesigned tablet since the debut of the original iPad in 2010. Available with an 11- or 12.9-inch display, the newcomer has a fresh new design, more power than ever, groundbreaking hardware features, and accessories that will help you make the most out of its capabilities.
Apple’s signature iPad home button has been dropped by Apple for an all-screen setup with a gesture-based user interface. Another longtime iPad staple, the Touch ID fingerprint sensor has been replaced with a Face ID feature, whose seamless functionality is already a hit among iPhone users.
After a week with a 12.9-inch variant of the latest iPad Pro, I was impressed by the blend of looks, craftsmanship, power, and versatility the tablet offers. Unless you are a demanding professional who needs to run more than two apps side by side, the iPad Pro is perfectly capable of replacing an ultrabook. Below are the reasons why:
According to Apple, the A12X Bionic chip makes the new iPad Pro more powerful than 92% of portable computers sold over the last year. Rather impressively, this percentage includes top-shelf notebooks with an Intel Core i7 processor on board.
During my testing, the iPad Pro felt blisteringly fast on all occasions. Any task I performed happened instantly - from opening and switching between apps, all the way to editing high-resolution photos in Pixelmator, among others. Best of all, the tablet easily made it through a full day of use between charges.
Using Face ID on the iPad Pro felt as instant as it does on the iPhone Xs and iPhone Xs Max. I really like that the feature works in both landscape and portrait mode.
• 11- or 12.9-inch Liquid Retina display with 264 ppi
• Up to 1 TB of storage
• 12 MP camera with f/1.8 aperture and 4K video capture at 60 fps
• Face ID with TrueDepth Camera
• Quad stereo speakers
• USB-C connector
The latest iPad Pro is the tech giant’s most radically redesigned tablet since the debut of the original iPad in 2010. Available with an 11- or 12.9-inch display, the newcomer has a fresh new design, more power than ever, groundbreaking hardware features, and accessories that will help you make the most out of its capabilities.
Apple’s signature iPad home button has been dropped by Apple for an all-screen setup with a gesture-based user interface. Another longtime iPad staple, the Touch ID fingerprint sensor has been replaced with a Face ID feature, whose seamless functionality is already a hit among iPhone users.
After a week with a 12.9-inch variant of the latest iPad Pro, I was impressed by the blend of looks, craftsmanship, power, and versatility the tablet offers. Unless you are a demanding professional who needs to run more than two apps side by side, the iPad Pro is perfectly capable of replacing an ultrabook. Below are the reasons why:
The iPad Pro is Mind-Bogglingly Powerful
The all-new Apple A12X Bionic chip of the iPad Pro is a new gold standard for the industry. Its architecture consists of four high-performance cores, a quartet of power-efficient ones, a custom GPU designed by Apple, and the latest Neural Engine iteration for advanced machine-learning capabilities.According to Apple, the A12X Bionic chip makes the new iPad Pro more powerful than 92% of portable computers sold over the last year. Rather impressively, this percentage includes top-shelf notebooks with an Intel Core i7 processor on board.
During my testing, the iPad Pro felt blisteringly fast on all occasions. Any task I performed happened instantly - from opening and switching between apps, all the way to editing high-resolution photos in Pixelmator, among others. Best of all, the tablet easily made it through a full day of use between charges.
Using Face ID on the iPad Pro felt as instant as it does on the iPhone Xs and iPhone Xs Max. I really like that the feature works in both landscape and portrait mode.
0 comments:
Post a Comment