New iPad Air with M1 was designed for creators & students, Apple exec says

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The new 2022 iPad Air was equipped with an M1 chip to meet the needs of both creative and productive users of the midrange tablet, according to an Apple executive.

iPad Air 4 and iPad Air 5
iPad Air 4 and iPad Air 5


Apple's Katie McDonald, the company's iPad Product Marketing Manager, recently spoke with YouTuber Brian Tong and a pair of content creators about the new iPad Air -- including how the company went about thinking what features the next generation should have.





For example, in designing a new iPad Air with an iPad AirM1 chipset, McDonald said that Apple really examined how users and customers were already using the previous generation model of the iPad Air -- and thought about how the M1 would bring a "massive leap" in performance to the midrange device.

"So it was really thinking about how people were using the iPad Air and we knew that the M1 was just gonna be a really quick fit for those customers," McDonald said. "We had planned to bring it and we're really excited to finally introduce it to the world."

As far as the target market for the new iPad Air, the Apple executive said that the tablet represents a step above the entry-level iPad. In other words, the device is aimed at content creators, college students, gamers, and other users whose expectations of performance are "really at the highest level."

"Maybe it's not their career, maybe they're not building a commercial," McDonald said. "But there are people where it's their hobby, it's their passion."

To that end, McDonald said that Apple planned on bringing an upgraded feature set to the iPad Air to enable those creative and productive workflows.

At one point during the video, Tong asked McDonald where the iPad Pro goes from here. Although McDonald didn't give any hints about future models, she said that the iPad Pro still continues to be the Apple tablet of choice for serious professionals.

"iPad Pro continues to feature the most advanced technologies that we offer on iPad," McDonald said. "That, of course, is gonna include that Liquid Retina with ProMotion ... it's gonna feature Thunderbolt connectivity, five studio-quality mics, four-speaker audio, that pro camera system on the back."

The full interview, which clocks in at about 45 minutes, is worth a watch for anyone interested in creative or productive workflows on the iPad Air. It's available to view here.

Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    Their best product by far is the regular iPad, with 256gb or up, because it’s a life safer for kids, who use it on a daily basis. It’s fantastic.

    Anything more expensive, even with better hardware, to me feels like a crippled version of a MacBook (Pro). I am often confronted with what you cannot do, instead of what you can do, mainly software related.
  • Reply 2 of 5
    corp1corp1 Posts: 92member
    Their best product by far is the regular iPad, with 256gb or up, because it’s a life safer for kids, who use it on a daily basis. It’s fantastic.

    Anything more expensive, even with better hardware, to me feels like a crippled version of a MacBook (Pro). I am often confronted with what you cannot do, instead of what you can do, mainly software related.
    The iPad excels for certain use cases: Procreate + Apple pencil is amazing. GarageBand is actually better on the iPad than on the Mac. Apple News is also a better experience on the iPad. And the iPad has a massive game library (though many iPad games can also run on Apple Silicon Macs.) However the iPad "Pro" is still missing Apple's Pro apps (Xcode, Logic Pro, Final Cut Pro, etc.) as well as features like virtualization.

    It's worth noting that Chromebooks, whatever their other limitations, can now run an entire Linux development environment, and Steam support is supposedly coming as well.
    edited March 2022
  • Reply 3 of 5
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,166member
    My uni student daughter has the new Air. if i look at it side by side with my IPP 10.5 I can see the absence of proMotion.  Otherwise it is very nice, very bright, and does not have my IPP’s stagelight just above thee touchid button.  
    edited March 2022
  • Reply 4 of 5
    davgregdavgreg Posts: 1,037member
    The iPad Pro has become my default away from home and my 14” MacBook Pro stays home doing desk duty attached to a 32” LG 4K display.

    The iPad OS continues to grow in capability and really negates the need most people would ever have for a laptop Macintosh. The new Air creeps closer to the Pro, but lacks Face ID which is much better for me than the Touch ID system. The difference in displays is also a big deal.

    I am expecting the next generation of iPad Pro to have a chip that gains performance over the M1 without being as power hungry as the Max, Pro and Ultra versions now featured in Macintosh models.
  • Reply 5 of 5
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,166member
    Same DavReg, same here,  but the main thing stopping an iPad being a complete replacement for a Mac is the limitations of iPadOS.
    muthuk_vanalingam
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