With new $2,300 iPad Pro, Apple proves itself a bunch of brilliant jerks
. My 2017 iPad
Pro, with uncanny timing, has started acting up these past few days.
All of a
sudden there's a patch of lighter-than-the-rest pixels at the bottom of the
screen, and I can't stop looking at it. It's the proverbial fly in the
ointment, the stain you can't remove: a reminder that even mighty Apple
technology will break down and die, faster than you'd like.
So when Apple came calling with a new iPad Pro
lineup Tuesday morning — without mentioning it costs more than $2,300 at the
upper end — I was probably more vulnerable to the sales pitch than the
average fanboy
I was
dazzled by the 12.6-inch iPad, or rather by the reduced bezel size that trimmed
this former monster to the size of legal paper — not that much larger overall
than my current 10.1-inch device with larger bezel and case. (Those numbers
refer to the size of the screen itself, rather than screen plus bezel; by
keeping the former the same, the device shrinks.)
I was most
definitely seduced by the new flat-sided Apple Pencil, which attaches
magnetically to the side of the new iPad Pro — and wirelessly charges at the
same time! With my current round Pencil, I had to buy a third-party
Pencil-holding case to keep it close, and I invariably forget to plug the
Pencil into the lightning port.
At the same
time, I was sad that Apple had removed the headphone jack (again!),
and that it was forcing iPad Pro upgraders to use the insecure Face
ID system rather than Touch ID. So much for Pro users who want to listen on
superior wired headphones without a mass of dongles, or unlock their iPad Pro
while wearing a hat and shades.
Ironically,
Apple had just revealed it was keeping the headphone jack in the new Macbook
Air, and, uh, adding Touch ID. So the company clearly understands that both are
important to computer users. And yet it claims to be pitching the iPad Pro at
the computer-buying market.
You
And then
there was the price tag. To be clear, $2,356 is what it costs for a
one-terabyte 12.6-inch iPad Pro with Pencil, Smart Keyboard and Apple Care. (We
haven't included the cost of any cases or extra adapters you might need; the
iPad Pro charges via USB-C rather than lightning, so anything you attached to
your iPad via the old cable system will need to be upgraded with a new
dongle.)
Sure, not
all iPad Pro buyers are going all-out like that. But here's my guess: Apple is
going to be extraordinarily good at upselling on this one. In fact, most users
are probably going to upsell themselves.
If you're in the market for an iPad Pro, why not get the
maximum storage? Think of everything you could do with a 1TB device —
especially now that you can use fully-fledged Photoshop on it. Not to mention
the console-style games Apple is pushing hard (the launch event included a demo
of NBA 2K19).
.
NBA 2K19 – PlayStation 4-$55.44
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