At an online launch event Tuesday dubbed “Let Loose”, the company introduced the first redesigned version of the iPad Pro since 2018. The new model is thinner, includes a crisper Ultra Retina XDR screen with OLED technology, and has a faster M4 chip that can handle AI tasks. The new iPad Air looks like the prior version, but with a larger screen-size option and the M2 processor.
The new 13-inch iPad Pro has a depth of 5.1 millimetres, which the company said makes it the thinnest Apple product ever. The bigger version is a quarter-pound lighter than its predecessor, while the 11-inch model weighs under one pound.
The unveiling ends Apple’s longest drought in new iPad releases since co-founder Steve Jobs first introduced the device in 2010. The line-up was previously updated October 2022, when Apple added a faster chip to the iPad Pro and rolled out a redesigned low-end model.
Apple is looking to pull the iPad out of a severe slump. The device’s sales were particularly weak last quarter, when they plunged 17 per cent and missed analysts’ estimates, but Apple predicted that iPad revenue would rebound in the current period.
Tuesday’s announcement didn’t do much to excite investors. That’s often the case with Apple events, since most of the key details get reported ahead of time. The shares were little changed at US$181.90 as of 12:06pm in New York, leaving them down about 6 per cent for the year.
The M4 chip, which replaces the M2 in the iPad Pro, is the latest instalment in Apple’s home-grown processor line. The central processing unit is 50 per cent faster than the one in the current iPad Pro, and the graphics engine is four times faster. The chip is built on second-generation 3-nanometer technology, Apple said.
The main improvement is the so-called neural engine, which the company says is 60 times faster than its original neural engine from 2017. That will help the iPad Pro handle AI tasks on the device itself. Apple plans to further discuss its artificial intelligence plans on June 10 as part of its Worldwide Developers Conference.
The iPad Pro’s OLED screen – short for organic light-emitting diode – means that colours are reproduced more accurately and appear more crisp. It’s the same underlying screen technology used in the iPhone and Apple Watch, but on a larger scale. Apple demonstrated how the screen can be far brighter than prior iPad displays and improves content that has a high dynamic range. For the first time, Apple is also offering a matte texture screen option for Pro users.
Prior iPad Pros used Mini LED screens, a technology that created a blooming effect – light bleeding through in a way that can muddle an image. The new models come in space black and silver colours, the company said.
Alongside the new hardware, Apple updated Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro for the iPad. It also launched a new app called Final Cut Camera to enable iPhones and iPads to provide additional camera angles during video shoots.
Both the new iPad Pro and iPad Air move the camera to the landscape side, responding to a frequent request from users.
Apple is attempting to squeeze more revenue out of the iPad line with the introduction of a pair of premium accessories. The new US$299 and US$349 Magic Keyboard – an iPad case with a built-in trackpad and keyboard – is now manufactured with a more durable aluminium material and makes the iPad look more laptop-like. A new US$129 Apple Pencil Pro includes new gestures for artists.
The company didn’t update iPad mini on Tuesday, but it does plan to make changes to that product as early as the end of this year, Bloomberg News has reported.
Along with the improved specifications, the iPad has a heftier price tag. The 11-inch model now starts at US$999, up from the prior model’s US$799. The 13-inch model is US$1,299 and up, an increase from a US$1,099 starting price. That makes it Apple’s most expensive tablet yet.
All of the new iPads go on sale next week and are available to order Tuesday. The company also cut the price of the 10th-generation iPad to US$349 and is discontinuing the US$329 ninth-generation model.
The M2 chip in the updated iPad Air is coming to both the 11-inch model and new 13-inch version. That’s an upgrade in the M1 chip from 2022 and makes the tablet 50 per cent faster, according to Apple. The 11-inch version continues to start at US$599, while the 13-inch model is US$799 – making it Apple’s cheapest tablet with a near laptop-sized screen.
Apple said it made the move to launch a bigger iPad Air after finding that about half of iPad Pro buyers chose the larger version of that model.
The new iPad Air comes in blue, starlight, silver and space grey, the company said. The iPad Air includes double the storage, starting at 128 gigabytes. It goes up to 1 terabyte. The iPad Pro starts with 256 gigabytes of storage, going up to 2 terabytes.