Quick Start is very helpful and I had no issues restoring my backup to and from 11, 12.9, mini, 10.5 (long story) over the past new months and it was always smooth. It can use an iCloud backup or transfer directly from the other iPad to the new iPad if you want (oddly that needed less time). It will update the new iPadOS if needed before the restore—and help you set up cellular if desired.what about restoring a backup from M1 to iPad mini? no issues there right?
I get that. Unlike my iPhone mini, there is no ”grandpa mode” zoomed display resolution to switch to, so one must adjust the text size for individual apps. But most system elements remain tiny. It feels like using an 11” iPad about 24” farther away than normal.I went to Mini for about 3 months. Couldn’t make the smaller size work for me.
Have you made the switch already? If you're like me then you'll immediately notice (and be annoyed by) the substantial degradation in screen quality. I own both of those devices.
Obviously everybody is different but for me, I replaced the M1 11” with an M2 12.9” specifically because I really disliked the screen on the mini. Since that’s the one I wanted, as the 11” is already too unwieldy, I decided to double down.
I imagine you can figure out how I feel about my own decision…
If I could get an iPad Pro mini without miniLED, I’d be all over that.
I blooming hate the screen on 12.9”…
You find it that bad? I agree it is slower, especially when compared to the second-gen Touch ID present on the iPhone 6s onwards, but it works fine for me on my Air 5, it doesn’t fail. Is it too slow for you? Too inaccurate?For some the big issue will be switching from the very convenient FaceID to the ultra inconvenient power button TouchID. It's even worse than the home button TouchID. It's so bad that I disabled TouchID altogether and use passcode alone. But if you hate FaceID than you might like this better.
I think I am a minority case that doesn't apply to everybody. I have tried several devices with TouchID over the years -- iPhone, iPad, Mac -- and they have never remembered my prints for more than 1-3 days. I have seen comments by others who have the same problem, but I assume they are rare.You find it that bad? I agree it is slower, especially when compared to the second-gen Touch ID present on the iPhone 6s onwards, but it works fine for me on my Air 5, it doesn’t fail. Is it too slow for you? Too inaccurate?
You find it that bad? I agree it is slower, especially when compared to the second-gen Touch ID present on the iPhone 6s onwards, but it works fine for me on my Air 5, it doesn’t fail. Is it too slow for you? Too inaccurate?
Did you carry your iPad + laptop? Thats my main issue. If I wasn't a laptop person (ALWAYS want my laptop with me), I would prefer the 11" Pro over the Mini.
That’s interesting, especially considering it works with specific digits. I hadn’t heard of that. I use one finger basically, but I’ve never had any issue with any of the fingers I’ve tried (admittedly, haven’t tried all 10).I've got an Air 4, Air 5 and mini 6.
On all of them, my right index finger works 99% of the time.
Meanwhile, my left index and left middle finger fail 99% of the time.
With the old home button TouchID, both my left and right hand fingers authenticate fine.
So, that’s the second thing. I have a laptop even though I hate laptops. I keep hoping iPads can become my portable computing solution. Until now that’s a complete failure… but I will still replace my MBPro with a Studio once it makes sense…Did you carry your iPad + laptop? Thats my main issue. If I wasn't a laptop person (ALWAYS want my laptop with me), I would prefer the 11" Pro over the Mini.
So, that’s the second thing. I have a laptop even though I hate laptops. I keep hoping iPads can become my portable computing solution. Until now that’s a complete failure… but I will still replace my MBPro with a Studio once it makes sense…
iPads will never be computers.
iPads will never be computers.