Making iPadOS finally live up to the iPad’s overachieving hardware<div class="feat-image">
</div><p>Every time a new iPad Pro is released, the reviews repeat the same narrative: powerful hardware, hamstrung software. The M4 reviews <a title="First M4 iPad Pro reviews praise OLED display, ‘the best kind of overkill’" href="
https://9to5mac.com/2024/05/13/first-m4-ipad-pro-reviews/">have been no exception[/url].</p>
<p>This gap isn’t because of a lack of effort on Apple’s part. The company has continually developed and pushed iPadOS forward in the nine years since the iPad Pro debuted. But the general consensus among reviewers is that there’s still a lot of work to do.</p>
<p>But what, exactly, would that work look like? How might the iPad’s software finally make good on the potential of its hardware?</p>
<p>Federico Viticci at MacStories <a title="not-an-ipad-pro-review" href="
https://www.macstories.net/stories/not-an-ipad-pro-review/">has attempted to answer[/url] exactly those questions.</p>
<a href="
https://9to5mac.com/2024/05/14/making-ipados-live-up-to-hardware/#more-949118" data-post-id="949118" data-layer-pagetype="post" data-layer-postcategory="ipad,ipad-pro,ipados" data-layer-viewtype="unknown" class="more-link">moreâ
Making iPadOS finally live up to the iPad’s overachieving hardware