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Last month, Apple introduced a new iPad Air with a larger 10.9-inch edge-to-edge display, a faster A14 Bionic chip, a USB-C port, and Touch ID built into the power button. The new iPad Air begins arriving to customers on Friday, and ahead of time, reviews of the device have now been shared by various media outlets and YouTube channels.

2020-ipad-air-verge.jpg
The new iPad Air via The Verge

Most reviews agree that the new iPad Air is the best tablet for the average customer, as it now has a similar design and features as the iPad Pro, despite starting at a lower price of $599, albeit with only 64GB of storage. iPad Pro models start at $799 with 128GB of storage.

The Verge's Dieter Bohn:
If you're looking to get an iPad right now and can afford it, the new $599 iPad Air is the best tablet for most people. Apple has taken the design from the more expensive iPad Pro and brought it down to a more reasonable price point. It's $100 more than it was last year, but in return this year's iPad Air has a bigger, better screen and a faster (and very intriguing) processor.
Engadget's Dana Wollman:
With so few differences between the iPad Air and the Pro, I'm forced to reconsider who the Air is for. Last year it was the perfect just-right tablet: it offered more features than the basic entry-level model, but was still more attainable than the premium Pro line. It was the best tablet for most people. This year, I would upgrade Air to the best tablet for almost everyone, and I'd even argue it's Apple's best high-end tablet. That is, until Apple upgrades the Pro with a new chip and more advanced display tech, which is almost certainly will.
Six Colors's Jason Snell:
The iPad Air is a remarkably capable device that offers many features of more expensive models for a lower price.

Though it's fair to point out that the price isn’t that much lower. The iPad Air starts at $599, meaning it's $200 less than the base-model iPad Pro. However, that iPad Air model only has 64 GB of storage. If you choose the only other storage option, a model with 256GB of storage, you'll pay $749—which is $150 less than a comparably equipped iPad Pro, and only $50 less than the base-model 128GB iPad Pro.
MacStories's Federico Viticci:
The iPad Air raises the baseline for what we should expect from iPad as a portable, versatile computer for everyone. If you're looking for an 11" tablet and think you can live without ProMotion and larger storage options, this is the iPad I recommend.
The Wall Street Journal's Nicole Nguyen:
The $799-and-up Pro is arguably the "better" tablet. It has Face ID, four speakers versus the Air's two, its screen is brighter, it has more cameras, plus a Lidar scanner for depth mapping and a higher refresh rate capable of smoother scrolling and gaming. There's also a thousand-dollar Pro with a bigger 13-inch screen.

But I didn't find myself missing the Pro's features. The biggest difference is the price: Starting at $599, the iPad Air is essentially a budget Pro.
For reviewer comments on some of the specific features that are or are not included on the new iPad Air, read on below:

Touch ID

Viticci says the new Touch ID sensor in the power button is "fast and reliable" and easily recognized his fingerprints in nearly any orientation, regardless of how the fingerprint was originally registered. He did have trouble getting it to recognize his index fingerprints with the iPad held upside down, but that may have been an issue with awkward finger placement.

He also says the power button's longer size, glossy finish, and more prominent bump compared to the power button on the iPad Pro make it easier to find by feel.
From a merely tactile standpoint, the longer shape and bump help in identifying the button by feel: on the 11” iPad Pro, I often find myself sliding my index finger up and down for a second to make sure I’m clicking the top button; on the iPad Air, the different texture, shape, and bump make the button impossible to miss at first touch.
Snell found that the fingerprint registration process requires a little more effort than on Home button Touch ID implementations, due to the narrower sensor.
Apple has done a good job of adapting this technology for this particular device. When training Touch ID to accept a finger, a user needs a bit more finger movement in order to scan the entire finger surface area, and Apple’s software does a good job at encouraging this. Also, once you scan the first finger, Apple’s software encourages you to scan a second finger on the other hand—I scanned both of my index fingers—in order to prevent having to flip the iPad over every time you need to unlock it.

Display

One of the most significant compromises on the iPad Air compared to the iPad Pro is the display, as while they both offer a "Liquid Retina" LCD, the iPad Air lacks 120Hz ProMotion and is a bit dimmer (500 nits vs. 600 nits for the iPad Pro). Still, reviewers found the iPad Air's display to be quite good, as noted by Wollman:
I don’t have much to complain about after using the tablet for nearly a week. I typed, browsed the web, streamed movies, scrolled through my Photos library. Everything looked sharp and punchy, but never oversaturated. The anti-reflective coating also meant I had some wide viewing angles.
Wollman did note that it's a shame Apple hasn't brought OLED display technology to the iPad yet, and while there are rumors of mini-LED iPad Pro models coming soon that will offer many of the same advantages of OLED, it will undoubtedly be a pricey high-end technology that will take time before it trickles down to more mainstream devices like the iPad Air.

Storage

Bohn lamented that the base iPad Air model comes with just 64GB of storage and that the only other available option is a big step up to 256GB at a $150 price premium.
My biggest complaint is about storage. The base $599 model has 64GB, which is a good enough amount today but may feel cramped over time. That’s not the complaint, though. The complaint is that there’s no 128GB option — to get more storage you have to spend $150 more for 256GB. At $749, you’re just $50 away from the 128GB 11-inch iPad Pro and you may as well just get that one. (Come to think of it, that’s maybe not an accident.)
With the iPad Air starting price already having increased by $100 over the previous generation, the price gap to the iPad Pro certainly closes substantially if you need more than 64GB of onboard storage.

A14 Chip

Even though the iPad Air is a cheaper device than the iPad Pro, it has a newer chip in the form of the A14, compared to the A12Z in the latest iPad Pro. Benchmark testing found that the iPad Air registers faster single-core scores than the iPad Pro, but that multi-core and graphics benchmarks are fairly similar between the two devices, with the iPad Pro pulling ahead on some more intensive tasks thanks to its pro-focused optimizations. According to Bohn:
My advice: if you know exactly why you need a more powerful GPU or CPU on an iPad, wait for the next iPad Pro to get this new A14 chip or something like it.

If all you care about is that the iPad Air is fast and that it will let you do both iPad things and lots of real-work things, then yes: it can do that.
More Reviews
We've also rounded up unboxing videos of the new iPad Air.

Article Link: New iPad Air Reviews: 'The Best Tablet for Most People' With New Pro-Like Design and Features at Lower Price
 
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As of now, it seems the 11” iPad Pro is a poor choice/value. Either get the 10.9” Air or get the 12.9” Pro
I looked hard at the Pro and almost ordered several times. I'm glad I waited as many of the "Pro" features I wanted are included on the Air. The additional speakers are the only thing the Pro has I would have liked on the new Air. I'm quite happy with two speakers on opposing sides though!
 
I looked hard at the Pro and almost ordered several times. I'm glad I waited as many of the "Pro" features I wanted are included on the Air. The additional speakers are the only thing the Pro has I would have liked on the new Air. I'm quite happy with two speakers on opposing sides though!

There is something to be said for the 120Hz (Pro Motion) on the iPad Pro. I don't own one, but I've played around with them at the Apple Store and it's so nice. At least to me, 120Hz is instantly noticeable and makes scrolling and swiping more fluid. It makes a big difference for LCD based screens, which the iPads have.
 
I wonder if he has insider info...and what very soon actually means. November 2020 or Spring 2021.

Jason Snell article:
So while the iPad Air is a great deal if you don’t need more than 64GB of storage, if you do need more than that, you’ll need to seriously consider if an iPad Pro might be a better option. (And if you’re considering an iPad Pro, you should probably wait—it’s due a major update very soon.)
 
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Two things that stand out to me that I didn’t think would bother me, but do, are the slightly thicker bezels and the Touch ID. On one of the reviews the touchID looked slower than I expected and a bit clumsy to use (press button, release, then hold finger on to unlock. At times triggering siri. Not to mention you have to find the button).

I think it’s a great buy for those happy with 64gb, but for higher storage it’s easy to recommend the then smaller price jump to get a pro for the promotion, faceID and improved speakers.
 
There is something to be said for the 120Hz (Pro Motion) on the iPad Pro. I don't own one, but I've played around with them at the Apple Store and it's so nice. At least to me, 120Hz is instantly noticeable and makes scrolling and swiping more fluid. It makes a big difference for LCD based screens, which the iPads have.

I agree. I certainly notice it between my iPads that do have it and those that do not. I don't think it would/will be as noticeable on the smaller iPhone screen, so that is why I don't think it was that big of deal it wasn't included in the iPhone 12 Pros this year.
 
Anyone else pre-order the iPad Air and show that it's arriving on Oct 23 but haven't received a shipping notification yet?
Right here. Makes me think it is already in the U.S., so that is fine.

I will agree that the 11” iPP is the better buy, but I bought the Air instead for a few reasons (Touch ID, many Pro features in a new shell, 5mm chip: Am hopeful this will mitigate the heat issues).

Looking forward to that new Touch ID. Glad to see Dieter brought that up in his review.
 
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I agree. I certainly notice it between my iPads that do have it and those that do not. I don't think it would/will be as noticeable on the smaller iPhone screen, so that is why I don't think it was that big of deal it wasn't included in the iPhone 12 Pros this year.

Pro-motion and quad-speakers are the only things missing stopping me upgrading to this from my 10.5" pro.
 
They should have started with 128GB. Especially now that the price is higher.
But what would the price be? I like higher SSD, but there is a lot more tech in this year's than last (the A14 is only 10% slower than the iPad Pro, the screen is bigger, it supports the Apple Pencil 2, has 4k video recording, much better graphics performance). Saying the price is higher is misleading because its not really the same iPad, just bears the same name
 
There are some. What language are you looking for?

There are no IDEs that would match the quality that you'd find on the Mac. iPads and iOS are too constrained.

Can I work on and run a Django (Python) project on it? That'd involve having a local Postgres database.

How about a Spring Boot (Java) project?

Unity/C#?
 
So you would expect the price to be the same only if the product was the same? How do you upgrade a device then?

There has to be improvements each version and all the things you've listed are not too crazy to warrant $100 up.

But what would the price be? I like higher SSD, but there is a lot more tech in this year's than last (the A14 is only 10% slower than the iPad Pro, the screen is bigger, it supports the Apple Pencil 2, has 4k video recording, much better graphics performance). Saying the price is higher is misleading because its not really the same iPad, just bears the same name
 
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