That said, it feels like the iPad is at a stage where Apple really needs to up its software game to match the hardware, and even iPadOS 15 doesn’t really take advantage of the power available to it. Most notably the smaller iPad is missing the Liquid Retina XDR Mini LED display which, in our opinion, is the standout feature of 2021’s top-end model. The iPad has never felt slow but the specs on this latest generation give it plenty of future-proofing headroom for years to come. The question that remains, however, is why has Apple endowed the iPad Pro range with what feels like a surfeit of power. Apple will say that it’s in order to make to make the best iPad it can, but the restrictive iPadOS doesn’t really allow you to take full advantage of all the power that’s on tap – multi-tasking still isn’t very intuitive, external display support is weak, file management is still very basic, and options to expand the iPad’s functionality via accessories is still limited. However, stocks are still limited at the time of writing, and you might have to wait a couple of weeks to get one in your hands; Apple says it’s working to address these supply shortages.
There are four speakers, located on the top and bottom if you’re holding the iPad in portrait, or on the sides in landscape – the preferred orientation for watching videos. Unfortunately, the camera continues to remain on top of the iPad in portrait orientation, which isn’t ideal for video calls if you’re talking to a group of people and have the tablet in landscape mode, as it’s off to one side.
There’s a SIM card slot on the right edge, and the pin connector on the back for attaching the Magic Keyboard.
However, for 2021, Apple has introduced a new XDR display on the larger 12.9-inch model powered by mini-LED technology, which the 11-inch version misses out on. You still get Apple’s IPS display, with excellent color fidelity and ProMotion technology that enables a 120Hz refresh rate for fast and smooth scrolling. The higher refresh rate also improves the Apple Pencil experience, with lower latency.
The much higher peak brightness and the contrast ratios on the larger iPad make for a screen that’s simply stunning. The M1 processor coupled with 16GB RAM makes opening and switching between apps faster than on any other tablet, and also on most PCs out there. If you’re just looking to do the things you normally do on a tablet, such as browse the web, consume media, and write emails and documents, the power inside the new iPad Pro almost seems overkill. It would also be nice to see Apple releasing its own pro-level apps, such as Final Cut Pro or Motion, for the iPad. Considering that the iPad Pros now have identical hardware to Macs, we really see no reason why Apple can’t make this happen. When you’re using the ultra-wide camera on the front of the iPad, the framing is automatically adjusted to keep you, or a group of people, in the center of the picture.
We’re not huge fans of using the back cameras on a tablet, but they’re there if you need them, and provide decent image quality. The lidar sensor also makes a comeback for use with AR apps, though we’ve not found many use-case scenarios for that since Apple added it to the iPad in 2020. The iPad ecosystem has grown recently, with multiple manufacturers offering a variety of protective cases, keyboard covers and stylus options.
Apple has released a new white model of the Magic Keyboard, but the color is the only thing that’s new. We did notice the battery depleting a tad faster, especially in standby mode with the Magic Keyboard connected, which makes sense, as that accessory draws power from the iPad Pro. Thankfully, Apple does provide a charger in the box with the iPad, which isn’t something new iPhone users can say.
The new mini LED screen technology is a generation ahead and makes HDR content stand out. If our iPad Pro 11 (2021) review hasn’t swayed you, then one of these three alternative options might pique your interest. It’s also cheaper, but its display has a lower refresh rate, it has fewer cameras, and it comes with less storage.
iPad Pro 2021 (11-inch) Review: M1 power, iPadOS drawbacks
Speaking of unlocking the tablet, it’s worth noting that unlike the 2020 iPad Air, there isn’t a fingerprint (Touch ID) option here. Thanks to the speaker placement, the stereo separation is great, meaning you can clearly hear which sounds are coming from the left and which – from the right.
But don’t get tricked – iPadOS 14 is arguably still just a glorified smartphone operating system running resized iPhone apps. There’s no lag to be seen, and as mentioned earlier, students are particularly likely to enjoy the iPadOS experience over Windows or Android, as it’s smooth even on the cheapest iPad.
In iPadOS 14.5 the homepage can consist of a Today View panel on the left – which shows your chosen widgets, such as the date and weather. Those include iMovie, for basic video editing, GarageBand, which is a really fun music-making app, Pages, for writing documents and more. If you’re a light user you’ll easily reach two or more days until needing to charge, as the standby power management on iPads is pretty solid. In any case, this is a great full-day tablet, and if you’re using it for school, you needn’t worry about bringing a charger, so long as you charge it overnight.
Other than that, the iPad Air 4 features a nearly identical premium build, albeit with just a single camera, slightly thicker bezels around the display and of course, it is powered by the older Apple A14 processor. Thanks to the speaker placement, the stereo separation is great, meaning you can clearly hear which sounds are coming from the left and which – from the right. Alternatively, you’ll need to do what Apple expects us to do and pick up some Bluetooth headphones such as the Cupertino company’s own AirPods This is where things get questionable. But don’t get tricked – iPadOS 14 is arguably still just a glorified smartphone operating system running resized iPhone apps.Very few programs, such as the LumaFusion video editor or the Procreate drawing app actually feel like desktop-grade software.
The dock is also used to enter Split View.The latter means two apps running at the same time, both taking half of the screen by default. Those include iMovie, for basic video editing, GarageBand, which is a really fun music-making app, Pages, for writing documents and more. Numbers aside, the tablet feels solid, fairly lightweight and thin.Unlike the larger 12.9-inch 2021 iPad Pro, this 11-inch model has essentially the same Liquid Retina LCD display as last year’s version.
The latter is just Apple’s way of saying that this screen goes up to a super smooth 120Hz refresh rate, meaning very smooth interface animations and seemingly quicker response times when interacting with the tablet, be it with your finger or an Apple Pencil.The faster refresh rate is something you don’t get on the base iPad and iPad Air models, and coming from the 2020 iPad Air, I can definitely notice and appreciate that this display is twice as smooth.In terms of display colors and sharpness – not a noticeable change from last year – but that’s not to say we don’t get nice and vivid colors (P3 Wide color gamut), reasonable sharpness and even respectable blacks when watching in the dark, which is particularly impressive for an LCD screen.However, we don’t get perfect pitch blacks as we do on OLED displays, of course. In this aspect, the 12.9-inch iPad Pro with its XDR mini-LED screen should perform better.And as for brightness, this laminated display gets super bright (600 nits) so it should never be a problem to see it even in sunlight.On the back of the 2021 iPad Pro we have a familiar camera module holding a wide 12MP main camera and an ultra wide 10MP one with a 125° FOV (field of view). Under those two we have a LiDAR sensor, a flash and a microphone.The 12MP front camera has a 122° FOV and supports Portrait Mode, with blurred backgrounds and lighting effects that can be switched on the fly.
There’s even a “stage light” option, which attempts to remove your background instead of blurring it, but it’s not perfect, as it results in soft edges around your face and body. And you should be able to take photos of objects such as buildings or statues without having to step back much to fit the entire thing in the frame, if at all.Overall, although this camera setup can’t beat a flagship phone, photos can come out really nice and sharp in good lighting conditions.This 2021 iPad Pro can record videos at up to 4K resolution and 60 FPS (frames per second).
I reckon that even some professional YouTubers will find it convenient and acceptable to film, edit and publish their videos entirely from this iPad Pro.
iPad Pro 2021 (11-inch) review: Astonishing battery life
The smaller new iPad Pro lasts longer on a single charge than almost any tablet we’ve ever tested, and its M1 processor is easily the fastest in the field. This iPad Pro 2021 (11-inch) review will provide answers to both of those questions, and compare it to Samsung’s most similar tablet — the Galaxy Tab S7. The iPad Pro Magic Keyboard (previous models are compatible) costs $299 extra, and the Apple Pencil 2nd Gen runs you $129. The amber browns of Immortan Joe’s craggy desert lair looked rich (enough to remind me I was a bit parched), and the dark-blue paint on Furiosa’s forehead — which matches her eyes — popped ever so slightly.
Small details such as scratches on Furiosa’s rig and the dirt on Max’s face looked crystal clear. You may not notice these differences, though, if you’re not watching HDR content, which the XDR display of the 12.9-inch iPad Pro 2021 needs to truly thrive.
For color output, the 11-inch iPad Pro 2021 keeps in line with Apple’s tradition of going for realism: our colorimeter rated it for 113.1% of the sRGB spectrum. I threw my basic multi-tasking set of issues at the iPad Pro 2021, splitting the screen between 13 Safari tabs and a 1080p/60fps YouTube video.
But since this is an iPad Pro, we had to give it a pro-level challenge: our Adobe Premiere Rush test, where we add a color filter and transition to a 4K video, and then export it at 1080p and 30fps. This seems to be the current pattern with Apple, where pro products get few color options than the entry level iMac 2021 and iPad Air. The USB-C port is upgraded from previous year’s model to include Thunderbolt 3 and USB 4 support. This is an advantage for improved bandwidth on external devices, so expect faster transfers from drives, as well support for up to 6K monitors.
Apple continues to give its iPads far better cameras than its MacBooks, as is the case with the new front-facing 12MP TrueDepth sensor, the star of the show here. And for once, an internal webcam is pretty smart: Apple’s new Center Stage tool allows the camera to track and follow your face — so you stay in the frame on calls. The one issue I had with Center Stage was while using it in a dimly lit room while watching horror movies with friends remotely — sometimes my face wasn’t illuminated enough to track.
The 12MP front-facing camera is also great for selfies, capturing the pinks of my cheeks, and superbly detecting the edges of my clear glasses in portrait mode. The rear cameras also proved superb for capturing my Orange Cassidy action figure, showing off the stitching of the pro wrestler’s acid wash denim jacket and shirt that bears his own visage. That said, I’d love it if Apple could have added Touch ID support on the power button, as found on the iPad Air 2020. A boombox, however iconic, is too big and bulky to tote around these days — especially when the quad-speaker setup of the iPad Pro booms as loudly as it does. As I hit play on Fiona Apple’s “I Want You to Love Me,” I smiled wide the sound filled my bedroom office and adjacent apartment spaces.
Piano keys plunked accurately, Apple’s voice hit all the right notes and crisp drum cymbals crashed crisply.
To see the rest of the iPad Pro 2021’s range, I switched the tone to modern rap, turning on Future’s “Move That Dope.”
Our web-browsing battery test, with the iPad set to 150 nits of brightness drained it of its charge in 13 hours and 42 minutes. The Amazon HD Fire 10 is the only tablet I remember lasting longer — but not by much, as its time of 13:45 wins by a mere 3 minutes.
Taking it for a spin on the 10FastFingers typing test, I hit a rate of 77 words per minute, keeping close enough to my 80 wpm average. I saw nearly no latency as I doodled in the Notes app, and continue to smirk as the Scribble feature in iPadOS does a decent job of interpreting my chicken-scratch handwriting to text. The 11-inch iPad Pro packs enough battery life to mop the floor with its big brother, and still offers the same improbably fast speeds you get on that 12.9-inch model. But the iPad Pro 2021 is even pricier than last year’s model, which will make folks ask if they need all that power and all those nits. When I’m inevitably asked for recommendations by friends and family, I will probably tell them to save $200 and go for the $599 iPad Air 2020, which gets you Magic Keyboard and 2nd Gen Apple Pencil support at $200 less.
iPad Pro 11-inch (M1, 2021) review
This brand-new 3rd generation iPad Pro 11-inch with M1 chip is ridiculously fast, and its fun and useful new features have been designed with creative professionals in mind. The headline feature of the new iPad Pro 11-inch (M1, 2021), is that it hosts the super-fast M1 chips that are now in the latest MacBook Pros and the 2021 iMac. We tested this in the British sunshine (yes, it’s a thing, sometimes) and are pleased to say that we could easily view the iPad even in the afternoon sun – though having the Magic Keyboard to adjust the angle definitely helped. Other features include P3 wide colour, True Tone tech that adjusts the white balance of the screen and ProMotion technology, which switches the display refresh rate from 24Hz up to 120Hz – another reason why it’s so smooth and speedy to scroll.
Casual users may find that the difference between the iPads when doing ‘normal’ tasks such as browsing the internet or streaming content is negligible. Where this iPad Pro 2021 really comes into its own is when doing more intense tasks such as editing 4K videos on LumaFusion – you can even do this with multi-cam footage – or working with heavy files in Affinity Designer or Photoshop.
The iPad Pro 11-inch WiFi and Cellular model works with 5G, which is absolutely great if you live in a place that has 5G, and not surprisingly, not so useful if not. This worked absolutely fine, and made our monitor into a handy second screen mirroring the iPad – which could be helpful when creating artwork.
The upcoming iPadOS 15 upgrade due in July should improve things, though these are new features and tweaks rather than a complete overhaul of the system. The split screen function is another one it took us a few goes to get the hang of (see Apple’s support page on multitasking (opens in new tab)). These support the features you might expect – Face ID, Animoji and Memoji in Messages, plus bonuses such as Group FaceTime – but the iPad Pro also has got a new trick up its sleeve. In practice, this is a fun and handy feature for when you want to chat without staying still, or for when extra people join you in shot.
Virtual yoga classes become a lot more interesting when the teacher can actually see everything you’re doing – just watch out for times when you would expect to be off camera, ie. The new camera system also offers Advanced Portrait mode, for beautiful background and foreground differentiation and gorgeous lighting for studio-quality selfies. Its LiDAR Scanner is also optimised for AR experiences, making it an exciting tool for those working in this space.
Apps such as Clips, Complete Anatomy, CamTrackAR and ARki are already making use of this, and we hope more developers build on this in future. Pro users will want to have headphones or connect speakers, but the sound is certainly decent enough to watch a film with. Colours look spectacular on the iPad Pro’s screen, and there’s more storage to save your files (Image credit: Apple)
Apple states that the new iPad Pros offer 2x faster storage compared to previous models. The only thing we’d like to see added is the controls you get with a ‘normal’ Apple keyboard or trackpad – for gathering apps, adjusting volume, and so on, but as you can easily do this on the iPad screen, this is only a minor complaint. Our two little grips are that we kept accidentally switching to the eraser via the double tap function – but that is no doubt just us getting used to it – and that there is nowhere to store the Apple Pencil apart from on the top of the iPad (where it magnetically attaches and charges). But if you can afford it, and you’re a serious artist, video creator or gamer, then the superior, larger screen of the 12.9-inch iPad Pro 2021 (opens in new tab) might be better suited to you. For casual users, it may not be worth paying extra for nice-to-have features such as Center Stage and super-speedy video downloads. For those who want a really fast tablet for their creative pursuits but don’t care so much about having a top-of-the-range display, then the iPad Pro 11-inch will be preferable to the 12.9-inch version.
Ultimately though, Apple is just really, really good at creating devices, and none of the iPad Pro’s competitors can quite match it in terms of style, design panache and exceedingly smart tech.
iPad Pro 11in (2021) review
Poor external monitor support Our Verdict That a tablet with an 11-inch screen could be considered both a perfect digital art tool and a ‘throw in any bag and go’ laptop replacement seems incredible, but this year’s smaller iPad Pro is just that – as long as you buy the Pencil and/or Magic Keyboard. However, few apps can as-yet take advantage of this year’s big performance boost – and there’s one key feature that we expect from laptops that most of us won’t want to live without.
It’s what you throw in your bag as you travel around, writing, drawing, creating and/or working – an existence we lost for a long time and are only starting to get back. As the name and price imply, this is aimed at professionals – or at least financially enthusiastic amateurs – who want to use it for more than just playing games and watching Netflix. The Pencil is a perfectly balanced and weighted stylus – light enough to use for long periods but heavily enough to make marks precisely. Yes, plugging your power lead into it is sleeker as your cable runs along your desk/table rather than hanging off the right edge of the landscape iPad – but it charges more slowly that way.
Maybe Apple has some idea that I’ll be working away on my iPad-as-a-laptop on a desk most of the time, briefly pulling it off the Magic Keyboard when inspiration strikes and I need to lie down on the sofa and sketch my Spring/Summer 2022 collection – but I’m more of a ‘when I plug it in, I need it to charge ASAP’ kinda person. You’ll see much faster processing as you render video projects, but that aside you don’t notice much difference between this year’s iPad 11 Pro and the previous model.
The next version of everyone’s favourite digital art app Procreate has some pretty-amazing-looking 3D tools that require the M1’s performance – but that’s still only a preview with no firm release date. It’s a bit of a gimmick, but there is something nicely intimate about it zooming into to one person when others leave, like a friend at a raucous party turning round to focus their attention just on you.
We managed to stream video continuously over wifi for 12 hours and 12 minutes and in my day-to-day testing for both artistic creation and business work I never found the power percentage dropping low enough that I got nervous I was going to run out of juice. Whether you’re drawing and painting in Procreate or writing documents in Word, the mixture of touch and Pencil/Keyboard makes creating and manipulating media effortless – until you want to bring things together.
This may change in iPad OS 15, which is due in next month or so – which introduces a multi-tasking view with proper split screen layouts. This is frustratingly awkward – especially so as the Sidecar feature lets you plug the iPad Pro into a Mac and use it as a second, touchscreen display.
iPad Pro 11in (2021) review: More luxury than laptop
Apple’s transition from Intel to ARM processors, announced in summer 2020, was ambitious and fraught with potential problems. After years of talking up the Pro as a worthwhile Mac replacement, Apple is putting its money where its mouth is and giving the premium tablet a desktop-class processor. That’s something we quite often say about Apple products, the Cupertino company being notoriously fond of finding a design it likes and then driving it into the ground across multiple visually (near-)identical generations. The device is light, mostly easy to pick up (those squared-off edges have a slight tendency to sit flush to flat surfaces when uncased) and comfortable to hold for extended periods. Face ID facial recognition is fast and reliable, and its application on iPad includes a neat graphic that points to the camera when you’ve inadvertently covered it up – a thoughtful inclusion. This is in contrast, of course, to the major screen revamp seen on the 12.9in version of the iPad Pro for 2021, which gets an XDR display based on mini-LED backlighting.
In practice the Pro 11in’s screen is exceptionally good quality and the average user is unlikely to find it lacking in any respect. It’s bright, clear and vibrantly colourful; moving or animated images are buttery smooth thanks to the high refresh rate, which also produces market-leading stylus performance with the second-gen Apple Pencil. The only differences are Smart HDR 3 rather than plain Smart HDR – these are versions of the AI image-processing tech that the iPad uses to intelligently comp together elements of multiple exposures to handle complex lighting conditions – and an extended dynamic range upgrade for video up to 30fps.
Our usual Smart HDR challenge is to shoot a tree with the sun behind it, an exceptionally difficult task involving simultaneously bright and dark conditions. Like the 12-series iPhones (which also have Smart HDR 3) the iPad was able to capture good detail in the shadows at the base of the tree without over-exposing the sunshine at the top. The highest leaves were a touch washed out, as Smart HDR 3 tried its best to compensate for the bright light, but the overall results were good.
A much bigger photographic improvement compared to the previous generation comes from the front camera setup, where the lens has been bumped from 7MP to 12MP, while the aperture has changed from f/2.2 to f/2.4 with the addition of ultra-wide. But the greatest benefit from the improved front camera will be enjoyed when making FaceTime and Zoom video calls, something that, in sharp contrast to outdoor photography, forms a key part of the iPad’s skillset. Our experience using the Pro for FaceTime was a marked improvement on the previous generation, with noticeably sharper image quality.
It’s a surprise, really, that Apple hasn’t focused on the front camera before now, since for most iPad owners it’s a more important element than the rear one.
It might be worth pointing out that this is a new feature for Apple but not for the industry: I used something similar on the Facebook Portal a couple of years back. Equipped with 8GB or 16GB of RAM (the 16GB allocation is reserved for the 1TB and 2TB models) and a Mac-class M1 processor, the iPad Pro for 2021 is monstrously fast.
It easily surpassed the benchmark performance of last year’s Pro models, whose speed we talked up at the time. Apps gradually become more demanding as time passes and more capable hardware is launched, and in a couple of years you’ll see the benefit of this device’s swaggering power. The iPad Pro 11in features a 28.65Wh rechargeable battery, and Apple reckons this should be good for up to 10 hours of video or web surfing over Wi‑Fi, or 9 if you’re using mobile data. Our testing suggests you can expect a little more than that (Apple tends to lowball its own battery estimates), with our sample Pro 11in dying after 12 hours and 12 minutes of non-stop Wi-Fi-based video streaming. But in most situations the iPad Pro should be comfortably fine for all-day battery life, which is quite possibly the single most important measure of success for a mobile device. Eight months down the line it’s hard to argue that things have changed enormously; 5G is still superbly fast if you can get it (on my iPhone 12 Pro I quite often switch to 5G in my own house when I’m more than one room away from the Wi-Fi router) but a lot of people can’t.
But it’s worth reiterating that the range of excellent accessories underpins the iPad’s ambitions as a standalone work device. The Magic Keyboard is costly, but it’s an excellent work tool that single-handedly drags the iPad closer to viability as a laptop replacement. It takes a little adjustment for those who are used to the more spacious keyboard of the average laptop, but you’ll quickly get up to a decent typing speed, and the trackpad is a boon. The weak link in the chain, and the main reason I’d advise readers against throwing their MacBooks out of the window and rushing to buy an iPad Pro instead, is iPadOS itself.
Right now, iPadOS simply isn’t as conducive to work as macOS – and that’s before you get to the more limited library of professional software, which still misses big Mac names like Final Cut Pro and Xcode.
Apple iPad Pro 11 (2021) tablet review – The Apple tablet sparks the M1-Turbo
The 2021 model is difficult or even impossible to beat on performance and features, especially considering its computing power and the state-of-the-art connections it offers. We recommend the iPad Pro 11 (2021) to everyone who needs fast hardware to, for example, edit videos or large image files.
The same applies to the MacBook Air, which offers slightly better battery life, but with the trade-offs of a darker display and a heavier chassis.
Apple iPad Pro M1 & iPadOS 15 Review: 4 Months Later
About four months ago Apple released the 2021 generation of its iPad Pro lineup. Apple also released a beta of iPadOS 15 recently which works with all current iPads.
Let’s start with the internal hardware and performance because that’s the biggest difference compared to last year. Inside both iPad Pro’s sits the same Apple M1 chipset that also powers the newest MacBook Air and iMac.
That Apple M1 chipset is crazy fast and beats the last generation and all current Android and Windows tablets by a huge margin. In my Adobe Premiere Rush render test, it’s faster than all competitors but beats the previous iPad Pro by a small amount only.
All demanding games I tried like PUBG Mobile, Call Of Duty, Need For Speed, and Genshin Impact perform very smoothly. And I’m sure this iPad Pro will be able to handle all demanding games for years to come since it’s so much more powerful than its predecessors and iPhones.
But, to be honest, I didn’t notice any performance difference compared to last year’s tablets.
Even when playing demanding games, you can go back right where you left the last time in Lightroom, Microsoft Office, Safari, and so on.
It’s the best standard LCD I reviewed, is very sharp with a resolution of 2388 x 1668 pixels, and with 600 nits, it’s brighter than almost all competitors. The screen is fully laminated, has coatings to prevent fingerprints, and just looks great.
It’s fully laminated too, has wide viewing angles, and, well, with 12.9 inches it’s very big. Especially when comparing it to a standard LCD directly, blacks of this XDR display do look much deeper, just like on an OLED.
Many users reported a kind of blooming effect that’s visible in some scenarios – when having white writing on a black background, for instance.
You can see this blooming when setting the tablet to dark mode and writing in the notes app with a bright color, for instance. But for that to be the case, you’ve got to watch a movie in the dark with the screen set to maximum brightness. On both screens, you can use the same Apple Pencil 2 which they introduced a couple of generations ago.
The newest version of iPadOS brings a couple of nice features to all iPads. In some apps like Apple Notes, you can also open a new window in the middle when using the split-screen view.
Inside every app, you can quickly start a new note by swiping with the Pencil from the bottom left corner.
Both iPad Pro’s offer a modern design and a very premium-feeling built quality.
Sadly, there’s no headphone jack anymore and as usual, you can’t expand the storage using a microSD either. On a positive note, I love that Apple is using a USB C port on the iPad Pro because that means you can connect almost every accessory that works with a standard laptop.
It’s still placed on the side when holding it in landscape orientation which is not ideal for video chats. We get the same 12-megapixel main camera with a 10-megapixel ultra-wide shooter, a LED flash, and the LiDAR sensor. For both iPad Pro variants, Apple is selling two different kinds of keyboards. It’s a slim cover that protects the front and back of the tablet and is connected magnetically. That means that the USB C port of the iPad Pro is free to be used with other accessories when using this keyboard dock. So, the Apple Magic Keyboard is a great choice if you often want to get some serious work done with your iPad Pro.
In my standard battery test, both the 11-inch and 12.9-inch iPad Pro got a runtime of 6 hours. For this test, I’m always looping an HD video on YouTube at maximum brightness.
The software is a great reason to get an iPad because developers continue to build better and more tablet-optimized apps for iPadOS.
Both iPad Pro’s are very expensive, especially with the accessories, and unless you use it as a work device, it’s probably not worth it for you to spend that much on a tablet. Some of the premium features are missing but it has a great 10.9-inch screen and it too is faster than all Android tablets. They are the fastest Android tablets you can buy, the screens support 120Hz as well, and the fantastic S Pen stylus is included.
Usually, and especially when factoring in the pens, both Samsung tablets are quite a bit cheaper than the iPad Pro.
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