Apple’s new iPad Pro has a speedy M2 chip and Wi-Fi 6E, making it one of the most powerful tablets on the market. The iPad Pro has a 12.9-inch display with a resolution of 2732x1824 pixels, making it perfect for professional use. The iPad Pro also comes with an A12X Bionic chip that is up to 50% faster than the A11 Bionic chip found in other tablets. The iPad Pro also has 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage, which is more than enough space for users to store their files and videos. The iPad Pro also comes with a 10-point multitouch screen that makes it easy to navigate through menus and applications. ..
Apple announced its new iPad Pro today, with the main improvement being that it’s supercharged with the company’s new M2 processor. Apple claims a 15% improvement in CPU performance compared to the M1, which powered the previous model, as well as a 35% increase in graphics performance thanks to a new 10-core GPU. The addition of an M1 processor on the iPad Pro and the iPad Air allowed for an amazing boost in performance, and an upgrade to the M2 just brings the bar up even higher.
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The new iPad Pro also comes with several other quality-of-life improvements. For one, it comes equipped with Wi-Fi 6E support, letting you surf the internet and download things much faster than before. Cellular-equipped models also support 5G. The second-gen Apple Pencil is also better supported on the new iPad Pro, as it’s now detected by your tablet up to 12mm above the display.
Otherwise, this iPad looks almost unchanged from its predecessor. It has the same external design, and it even has several omissions compared to its cheaper relative, the new iPad — that one got a new landscape camera as well as a new, thoroughly improved Magic Keyboard Folio with the option to detach the keyboard. It looks like Apple just took the previous model and swapped the internals out — a strategy the company previously applied with the M2-equipped 13-inch MacBook Pro.
Apple’s newest pro-grade tablet starts at $800 for the Wi-Fi model, and $1,000 if you want it with cellular support. It’s Apple’s cheapest M2 device to date, as the MacBook Air starts at $1,200, but also, it has a different, more limited operating system, so you’d need to check what works best for you.
Source: Apple