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The current iPad Air was introduced in March last year, adding the M1 chip, Center Stage on the front-facing camera, a faster USB-C port, and several new color options, but it was still a fairly minor upgrade over the previous model from September 2020. As we near a year and a half since the fifth-generation iPad Air was introduced, what can users expect from the sixth-generation model and when will it launch?

Air-2022-M1-Feature.jpg

As of 2023, it has been some time since the iPad Air had a major hardware refresh. Yet due to its positioning between the entry-level iPad and the iPad Pro, it is not immediately clear what a new iPad Air model could gain without cannibalizing the iPad Pro.

There have been few concrete rumors about the features the next iPad Air will offer as yet, so the overall picture of what to expect is still somewhat fluid. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has repeatedly said that an iPad Air update this year with a minor "spec bump" is not out of the question, suggesting that the upgrade will be fairly iterative, targeting several small but significant areas.

A chip upgrade is the most certain feature coming to the next iPad Air. The iPad Air currently contains the M1 chip. There have been no reports about what chip the next-generation iPad Air will feature, but the M2 chip has now been in the iPad Pro for almost a year, meaning that it should be more than suitable for the iPad Air. For comparison, the M1 chip was present in the previous-generation iPad Pro for 11 months before it came to to the iPad Air. There is even the possibility that it could skip the M2 and get the M3 chip instead, depending on the timing of its release.

A minor spec bump is also likely to include upgrades to the front and rear cameras, potentially bringing features like Photonic Engine to the iPad for the first time. ProRes video recording, Audio zoom, stereo audio recording, Portrait mode, and Portrait Lighting support are all plausible upgrades in this area.

ipad-air-m1-2.jpg

A horizontally oriented front-facing camera and a Thunderbolt port are among the other potential features for the sixth-generation iPad Air. The latest iPad Pro models brought connectivity upgrades like Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 to the iPad for the first time. By now, these capabilities are overdue to make their way to the iPad Air. Similarly, Apple Pencil hover, another iPad Pro-exclusive feature, could finally trickle down to the iPad Air in its next incarnation.

A new iPad Air launching this year is certainly more likely than a new iPad Pro emerging, but Apple historically has only updated the device around every two years. While a refresh to add the M2 chip is certainly possible in 2023, it may be more probable that Apple will again wait two years to update the device and target 2024 for a more worthwhile upgrade.

Last month, Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo said that new iPad models are "unlikely" to launch this year, seemingly leaning into a 2024 launch for the next-generation iPad Air. However, a reliable Weibo leaker recently said that the sixth-generation iPad Air should launch in October as the only iPad refresh of 2023, with "no mini and Pro this year."

More strikingly, on a September episode of The MacRumors Show podcast, Mark Gurman said that there is a new iPad Air with improved specifications in the works and the device is apparently "coming soonish," likely this month. As such, the sixth-generation iPad Air appears to now be pending release, meaning that a launch in the near future cannot yet be ruled out. If a month passes with no such occurrence, the first half of 2024 will become the most likely scenario.

Update: A new report suggests Apple is working on two separate sixth-generation iPad Air models, but it unclear if this refers to two different size options or something else.

Article Link: iPad Air 6: Potential New Features and Launch Timing [Updated]
 
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seek3r

macrumors 68020
Aug 16, 2010
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I would love to upgrade to New and Shiny, and eventually I guess I'll be forced to upgrade when they stop supporting my iPA, but honestly the extra grunt, for most folks including myself, is pretty limited in usefulness by iPadOS right now. Sure, there are people who do a lot of heavy lifting on their iPad, but for most people the level of productivity is kinda limited by the OS. The way they've been basically poorly re-implementing basic desktop features for the new modes that everyone has been able to do in desktop OSes, including MacOS, for literally decades doesnt inspire confidence. Windows 3.1 literally did windowing better for ex.

So yeah, my 4th gen works just fine for what I need it to do within the limits of the os, and would work for most folks that use ipads. They keep putting out more powerful ipads but very limited ways to use that power, it's frustrating.
 

GMShadow

macrumors 68000
Jun 8, 2021
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I would love to upgrade to New and Shiny, and eventually I guess I'll be forced to upgrade when they stop supporting my iPA, but honestly the extra grunt, for most folks including myself, is pretty limited in usefulness by iPadOS right now. Sure, there are people who do a lot of heavy lifting on their iPad, but for most people the level of productivity is kinda limited by the OS. The way they've been basically poorly re-implementing basic desktop features for the new modes that everyone has been able to do in desktop OSes, including MacOS, for literally decades doesnt inspire confidence. Windows 3.1 literally did windowing better for ex.

So yeah, my 4th gen works just fine for what I need it to do within the limits of the os, and would work for most folks that use ipads. They keep putting out more powerful ipads but very limited ways to use that power, it's frustrating.

There's this weird notion of 'needing to use power' when it comes to iPads that isn't brought up when it comes to Macs or iPhones, and it's...kind of annoying? Pretty much any computer spends more time waiting on the user than it does working on tasks, but that isn't a problem for people. An iPad that does the same is some kind of heresy though.
 
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Lakersfan74

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Oct 17, 2019
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Better rear camera, ProRes video recording, thunderbolt, Face ID, four speakers, more microphones, promotion, Apple Pencil hover and portrait mode are the main differences between the 11 inch Pro and current iPad Air. For $150 more if both are 256 I would rather get the Pro which is what I did
 

seek3r

macrumors 68020
Aug 16, 2010
2,295
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There's this weird notion of 'needing to use power' when it comes to iPads that isn't brought up when it comes to Macs or iPhones, and it's...kind of annoying? Pretty much any computer spends more time waiting on the user than it does working on tasks, but that isn't a problem for people. An iPad that does the same is some kind of heresy though.
it's not that it's heresy, it's that people *want* to do more with their iPads. Also, come on, Apple had that whole marketing campaign of "what's a computer" for the iPP, so they *invited* the comparison to Macs. Last, Apple's been moving in that direction, of creating and allowing expanded desktop style usage, but weirdly poorly, like it's some poor intern's project to re-invent windowing. and *that's* super frustrating
 

Crow_Servo

macrumors 6502a
Feb 17, 2018
901
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America
The iPad Air gets refreshed more frequently than every 2 years (not counting the sizable gap between the Air 2 and 3). The Air 3 was Spring 2019, Air 4 was Fall 2020 and Air 5 was Spring 2022. So those were all less than 2 years apart.

It would make a lot of sense for the Air 6 this month and the Mini 7 either in the Spring of 2024 or the Fall of the same year. The Mini 6 was released 1 year after the Air 4.

Apple definitely waits extra long to refresh the Mini compared to the Air. The goal seems to be to have consumers believe the Mini is going away, and then refresh it as a surprise.

I bought the Mini 4 in early 2018 because I thought it was the last Mini, but a little over a year later, Apple released the Mini 5 (alongside the resurrected Air 3).

I think it’s interesting that there was mention of a possible M3 chip in the Air 6. If that actually happened, I guess the next iPad Pro would get an M3 Pro or something to differentiate it.

It’s always fun and/or frustrating to speculate about future Apple releases.
 
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Biro

macrumors 6502a
Jan 11, 2012
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I think an M3 Pro chip for the iPad Pros is an excellent idea. The standard M3 can go in the Air and Mini - although I wouldn’t complain if they got the M2. The base iPad can get the M2 or M1. It’s time to step away from the A-series chips for the iPads.

As for myself, a new Air with M2/M3, upgraded screen, a landscape position FaceTime camera and a greater commitment to lighter weight would have me first in time to buy one.
 
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