By David Pierce
For the first time since 2010, when Steve Jobs unveiled the
iPad, Apple's tablet is no longer just a big iPhone.
A new version of iPad software, called iPadOS, gives the iPad
new powers and makes it more useful for multitasking and all kinds
of work. It might still not feel exactly like your laptop, but it
can now do just about everything your PC can. And, great news: The
iPad doesn't have a butterfly keyboard.
The new iPadOS launches officially this fall, but it is
available now in a public beta. In my early tests, the software is
a little buggy, and a lot of apps aren't fully compatible, so
please don't install it on your primary device just yet. But iPadOS
has already changed my opinion of iPads. Apple's tablet still isn't
going to kill the Mac -- but it might be all the computer you need.
And did I mention you can now connect a mouse?
What's a Computer?
As good as recent iPads have been, they couldn't be your only
computer. Getting things done involved too many apps, moving files
around was too complicated, and there were some things, like
reading a USB flash drive, that the iPad simply couldn't do. You
still needed a just-in-case laptop or desktop for when the iPad
simply didn't have an app for that.
Two new features of iPadOS help shrink the list of things you
just can't do on an iPad down to almost nothing.
--Safari, the iPad's default web browser, now acts like a
full-featured Mac browser. In fact, it tells websites that it's a
Mac, so you always get the full web experience. No longer do you
land on hamstrung mobile sites or, worse, get kicked to an app --
thanks for nothing, Google Docs. Since so much of our computing
life takes place on the web, this is the single most important new
iPadOS feature.
--Now you can plug just about any external drive into an iPad
and use it like a normal drive in the iPad's Files app. (You might
need a Lightning or USB-C adapter, though, so keep reading.) That
is crucial for dealing with photos, trading files around the office
or simply backing up all your stuff. You can zip and unzip files --
just long-press and tap Compress -- and move them between drives,
too. As long as there's an app on your iPad to open a file, it will
open from any drive you have.
A powerful web browser and file manager bring the iPad much
closer to parity with the Mac. And, of course, the iPad already had
a lot going for it, from its huge App Store to the Apple Pencil.
The rest of iPadOS is about making all that stuff easier to
use.
It's How You Use It
Much of the other new stuff in iPadOS is also coming to iOS 13,
the software that powers the iPhone. I like the systemwide dark
mode -- obviously -- as well as big improvements to apps like
Photos and Reminders. I especially like that I can now say, "Hey
Siri, play Billie Eilish on Spotify" instead of having to use Apple
Music. But we'll come back to iOS 13 another day.
Where iPadOS differs most from iOS 13 is in all the places Apple
tried to give you more. More information on every screen, more ways
to get around, more tools for getting stuff done.
For instance: You can now pin widgets to the left side of your
home screen. I have my Google calendar and my TickTick to-do list
there, and it's hugely helpful.
And now, in addition to having two apps side by side with a
third floating over top, you can open multiple windows of the same
app. I use it all the time for looking at one email while composing
another, or consulting an outline in Notes as I compose a story
next to it. You can open up a bunch of those small popover windows
at once, too, and swipe through them like you're switching apps on
an iPhone.
The new windowing system is definitely more powerful, but it
takes practice to figure out. When you first update, you'll see a
pop-up offering to explain the gestures. Don't just wave it away.
Pay attention, take notes.
Apple made some improvements to text editing, adding new
gestures for things like copy and paste, plus a handy three-finger
swipe to undo anything you just did. But forget all that: I finally
have a mouse connected to my iPad.
It's technically an accessibility feature, and a buried one: Go
to Settings > Touch > AssistiveTouch > Pointing Devices.
But even the big, blunt cursor makes scrolling websites and
selecting text so much easier. I've long believed the combination
of touch and mouse is better than relying on one or the other, and
this implementation, however limited, proves it.
After spending a few weeks using iPadOS, the thing I miss most
about my Mac is all the ways I can customize it. I use Chrome, not
Safari, but iPadOS won't let me change the default browser. I use
Spotify, not Apple Music -- same problem. My Mac has lots of
browser extensions, a tool called Alfred I use for
keyboard-shortcutting my way around my computer, and lots of other
big and small tweaks to my computing experience. The iPad still
makes you do things Apple's way.
If you can live without the endless tweakability of a
full-fledged laptop -- and I suspect most users can -- an iPad
running iPadOS can be your primary computer. You'll need some extra
gear, though.
Start with a keyboard: I recommend getting something from
Brydge, which makes nifty keyboard attachments that look and feel
better than anything Apple makes. For users of the latest iPad Pro
models, I'd also recommend getting a USB-C adapter like the $60
Satechi Pro Hub, for plugging in all the hard drives and
accessories that finally work on your iPad. If your iPad has a
Lightning port instead, Apple's $39 Lightning-to-USB adapter should
do the trick.
Before you rush to install iPadOS, Apple still needs time to
squash the software's bugs, and app developers need time to adopt
the new features. But you also should hold off on buying a laptop
between now and then. For many users, come fall, Apple's tablet
will also be its best computer.
(Dow Jones & Co., publisher of The Wall Street Journal, has
a commercial agreement to supply news through Apple services.)
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 07, 2019 09:14 ET (13:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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