Apple iPad Pro (11-inch, Wi-Fi, 64GB) - Silver (1st Generation) (Open Box)
$736.23
Condition: New; Open Box
Top positive review
12 people found this helpful
Never saw any need for a tablet before . . .
By Clevor on Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2019
. . . because I am a PC guy with a compact Dell XPS 13 for travel purposes, a MacBook Pro killer in a Lenovo Yoga 920 (UHD touchscreen, 2-in-1 convertible, two Thunderbolt 3 ports), and two desktops including a high-end gaming machine (Alienware Aurora R7). When traveling in Japan via rental car, I rely on my iPhone 6+ for GPS navigation and in combination with Google Maps and Google Earth, I use it to find tourist attractions, hotel/ryokans, and places to eat. I tried to convert my Dell XPS into a GPS-capable navigation device to take advantage of the large screen, and to backup the iPhone, but it failed miserably. What do the CEOs of Apple, Google, and Microsoft have in common? They do not get along, so neither do their devices or software. PCs are primitive compared to cell phones in their lack of a cellular function and built-in GPS. I tried attaching a GPS dongle to my Dell except it won't interface seamlessly with Google Maps or Google Earth. You have to install a clunky GPS software which is primitive in features compared to the Google apps. This is fine if you have a boat or plane and need something to update your location, but it won't do what Google Maps can do: you can find even the most obscure tourist attractions in a foreign country, you can find your hotel for the night, and you can find nearby restaurants complete with pictures of the food and customer reviews. In one instance, I needed to find the nearest supermarket to my hotel and you just poke on the location with your finger and you have photos of the grocery aisles and even the selection of obentos in the food section! Use Google Earth and you can find out how your hotel looks so you will recognize it when you arrive. So I finally bit the bullet and ended up getting this tablet. The GPS chip is only in the expensive WIFI + cellular version. Apple products are way overpriced if you ask me; at $1050, this IPad Pro 11" cost more than my Dell XPS laptop. I agree with one reviewer that market price on these units should be in the $300-400 range, no more. And there is NO WAY an iPad can do as many things as a laptop. To wit: this IPad Pro 11" has a USB-C port, correct? So I connect the USB-C hub for my PCs and hooked up a 4 TB portable HDD figuring I could access the data on it. HAHAHAHAHA! Apple products won't have anything to do with anything remotely PC-ish such as external HDDs. My only option here is to buy multiple 256 GB IPad compatible flash drives, when for the price of one of these, you can easily buy a 2 TB portable HDD for a PC. I could use Cloud storage, but I need to access the data on a plane and I don't want to pay for the pathetically slow WIFI you get on a flight. Why isn't there one device that has: - Built-in cellular, WIFI, and GPS - Has a large, 2-in-1 touchscreen so you can use it as a tablet - And has upgradeable RAM and cheap storage space, yet works seamlessly with Google apps? I will say this IPad Pro 11" is sweet compared to my dated iPhone 6+. It's slick and fast, has a large, gorgeous liquid Retina screen, has facial recognition, and has better battery life, but as a retiree, it's a luxury I don't really use much unless I'm traveling. But I had gone 10 years before I recently upgraded my PCs, and my IPhone 6+ is a good 4-5 years old, so I imagine I'll be hanging on to this $1K investment for quite awhile.
Top critical review
27 people found this helpful
Needs improvements on small things; not worth it for me...
By Deeply Disappointing Spoon on Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2019
1) If you can imagine every limitation that a tablet would have over a desktop replacement, this has it all—seriously don’t fool yourself like this would be a suitable replacement for a laptop, it’s not. If you want to make the jump to doing note taking and work flow management on a tablet then this is right for you. This doesn’t so much apply to me, but they oversold this as something that ‘could potentially’ replace a laptop, and it just can’t—not as an app-based OS. 2) Battery life sucks - pretty much only get that 10 hour battery life when it’s in my bag and not being used lol. I’ve watched several YouTube videos with advice on saving battery life, disabling apps, function, location tracing, etc., in an effort to prolong my battery life but to no avail. It just dies fast and that robs me of my freedom if I’m always plugged in. 3) Thanks for the 3” (sarcasm) USB-C cable Apple, what the hell am I supposed to do with it, let the iPad dangle from my wall while I charge it? $1200 only to get an nonsensically short charging cable is just such a petty thing to do on Apples part. Go ahead and buy a 6.6ft or 10ft USB-C if you’re going to smash the like button, fair warning. 4) Screen is really good, but not accurately responsive. For the best tablet on the planet lol it’s not that great at being a tablet when it comes to responsiveness. I truly feel like my iPhone 6S has more responsiveness than this tablet does which is ages behind this things capability. It frankly doesn’t make any sense. Single tapping results in double or even triple tapping, or selecting stuff while scrolling etc. It’s frustrating and clunky. 5) Amazing job on gen 2 pencil, seriously the only way it could be better is if it was double sided and didn’t have a pointless end to mimic a real pencil. Too bad the pro isn’t good enough for it, say you are taking notes as lowly college student or drafting an email to your boss and you toiled over spelling “supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.” Well, you can’t click “supercalifragilistic(HERE)expialidocious,” you can only click, “(HERE)supercalifragilisticexpialidocious(OR HERE).” Such incredible precision with the pencil... that is squandered with petty limitations by the iPad Pro. 6) Multitasking limitations; If you are trying to type something on an app, be careful with not saving your progress or working in an app that auto saves your progress—especially in we browsers. The apps have the tendency to refresh in the background and put you back at the app home screen window as if you exited and reopened that app. This can be especially frustration when trying to type and multitask. 7) In addition to multitasking refresh issues, you can split apps between multitasking windows. It’s a reasonable limitation, but also still frustrating for the multitasker that thinks having and iPad Pro will solve all of their “on the go” problems; don’t worry, many of those problems are coming right along with you as you go lol. Safari, for example, being an app... you can have a web browser in a shared multitasking window along with imessaging for example, and then also have a safari next to a separate multitasking window with say, Notability (if you’re a note taking college student). 8) You’re paying quite a bit of money for something that you can get for much cheaper, I fear, but make no mistake Apple 100% has my vote for reliability and outlasting the competition, which is why despite all of these cons and honestly a 1 star review on the principle of headaches this thing is giving me, I will be keep it. I don’t want to give this a 1 star, and if it were a $600 product I probably wouldn’t. The fact is that this is a $1200 tablet with too many small issues that add up to make it overall not worth it for the price. I’m rating this product based on both cost and quality and the relationship between the two. For example, for $400, this would be a 5 start product to me. If none of this applies to you and you think that it’s the right fit for you, you’ve at least heard my gripes; you still get all the Apple apps which is bae, the gen 2 pencil is legit amazing... again, I just think the pro has small quirks that make it not worth the price. Cheers, PS. Don’t roast me idgaf how much you love your iPad Pro, go write a review about it.
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Never saw any need for a tablet before . . .
By Clevor - Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2019
Verified Amazon Purchase
. . . because I am a PC guy with a compact Dell XPS 13 for travel purposes, a MacBook Pro killer in a Lenovo Yoga 920 (UHD touchscreen, 2-in-1 convertible, two Thunderbolt 3 ports), and two desktops including a high-end gaming machine (Alienware Aurora R7). When traveling in Japan via rental car, I rely on my iPhone 6+ for GPS navigation and in combination with Google Maps and Google Earth, I use it to find tourist attractions, hotel/ryokans, and places to eat. I tried to convert my Dell XPS into a GPS-capable navigation device to take advantage of the large screen, and to backup the iPhone, but it failed miserably. What do the CEOs of Apple, Google, and Microsoft have in common? They do not get along, so neither do their devices or software. PCs are primitive compared to cell phones in their lack of a cellular function and built-in GPS. I tried attaching a GPS dongle to my Dell except it won't interface seamlessly with Google Maps or Google Earth. You have to install a clunky GPS software which is primitive in features compared to the Google apps. This is fine if you have a boat or plane and need something to update your location, but it won't do what Google Maps can do: you can find even the most obscure tourist attractions in a foreign country, you can find your hotel for the night, and you can find nearby restaurants complete with pictures of the food and customer reviews. In one instance, I needed to find the nearest supermarket to my hotel and you just poke on the location with your finger and you have photos of the grocery aisles and even the selection of obentos in the food section! Use Google Earth and you can find out how your hotel looks so you will recognize it when you arrive. So I finally bit the bullet and ended up getting this tablet. The GPS chip is only in the expensive WIFI + cellular version. Apple products are way overpriced if you ask me; at $1050, this IPad Pro 11" cost more than my Dell XPS laptop. I agree with one reviewer that market price on these units should be in the $300-400 range, no more. And there is NO WAY an iPad can do as many things as a laptop. To wit: this IPad Pro 11" has a USB-C port, correct? So I connect the USB-C hub for my PCs and hooked up a 4 TB portable HDD figuring I could access the data on it. HAHAHAHAHA! Apple products won't have anything to do with anything remotely PC-ish such as external HDDs. My only option here is to buy multiple 256 GB IPad compatible flash drives, when for the price of one of these, you can easily buy a 2 TB portable HDD for a PC. I could use Cloud storage, but I need to access the data on a plane and I don't want to pay for the pathetically slow WIFI you get on a flight. Why isn't there one device that has: - Built-in cellular, WIFI, and GPS - Has a large, 2-in-1 touchscreen so you can use it as a tablet - And has upgradeable RAM and cheap storage space, yet works seamlessly with Google apps? I will say this IPad Pro 11" is sweet compared to my dated iPhone 6+. It's slick and fast, has a large, gorgeous liquid Retina screen, has facial recognition, and has better battery life, but as a retiree, it's a luxury I don't really use much unless I'm traveling. But I had gone 10 years before I recently upgraded my PCs, and my IPhone 6+ is a good 4-5 years old, so I imagine I'll be hanging on to this $1K investment for quite awhile.
A wonderful tablet. I’m very happy with it. Great with Apple Pencil
By Angel M. - Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2019
Verified Amazon Purchase
I’ve been without an iPad for over a year and got the itch to have one again for it’s portability and power. I’ve been using it for a few days now and I love it. I had an iPad 3, my wife has an Air 2 and this 11” Pro is my favorite of them all. SURPRISE! With it’s variable refresh rate (up to 120hz) it is noticeably smoother to scroll than the new iPad Air 3. You may not notice it if you don’t use them side by side or one right after the other. I spent about a half hour going back and forth between the Air 3 and the 11” Pro. The Air 3 is great, no question. The Pro just felt and performed that tiny bit nicer and smoother along with the extra screen real estate. Also, as fast and capable as the Air 3 is, it still looks like “the old iPad” compared to the new Pros. My Pro is everything I expected. Very fast, very capable, a pleasure to hold and to use. I only wish I coulda sprung for the 1TB version for the extra storage but also the 2GB of RAM the 1TB versions have. Oh well. I’m plenty happy with my Pro. The Apple Pencil should really be included in the box for the price though. Speaking of the pencil, yeah, I got one of those too and I can’t believe how well it works. There is just about no latency at all when using it. You can really lay down some beautiful sketches if you’ve got any artistic talent in your bones. Also, it should come with a 30W charger, not the B.S. 15W unit it ships with. C’mon Apple. Enough is enough already with bleeding your customers out.
A pro tool for Proers
By Lawrence Nakamura - Reviewed in the United States on November 27, 2019
Verified Amazon Purchase
Few days ago, a friend of mine at Penn told me she want to find a gadget which can help her with daily trading in the go, stay long time, work super fast and as secure as possible since we must realize all procedures were correct in trading. Then, I suggested her this device and directly bring to her( as a marketing guy , I would have to recommend certain software before I handle it to her) Now, it has been two days since she got it. She complain about the battery life, it cannot hold up to a trade day, from 10 to 5. You would need a portable charger or a rapid type c charger to make sure it would works fine. And the performance is amazing, it is an enjoyment to view all data, stat on this glorious display. NetDania, Bloomberg professional and so forth. She is satisfied with all other features, lightweight, good color, amazing craftsmanship and apple logo. Apple logo is a thing that many cannot resisted to even Wharton guys claim they were so reasonable. Lol.... Well, frankly saying, if you were a Proers, you should consider it but I would more recommend the iPad air since it would be cheaper and last longer, A12 would be enough to use. Plus cellaur edition would be a better fit. K never regret my purchase to my LTE edition iPad mini since it helped me to earn big bucks since June. All in all, you will not regret this purchase even if the A13X would roll out soon. Time is money, time is life, you should get start your amazing life now Get it.
Truly the best IPad to-date
By Consumer - Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2019
Verified Amazon Purchase
My 4th IPad! Design is beautiful - but you knew that. Pros: Fast! More RAM means more open apps and no stalls when multitasking. Mega pixels! Unbelievable resolution! Just the right size and more importantly weighs close to nothing. Big enough to comfortably write on and indulge that Netflix binge on your patio. Speakers are a decent upgrade from iPad Pro 2017 9.7 inch - much better bass response. New UBC allows heretofore unavailable connectivity to iPad - but you’ll need to buy another piece of hardware to make it useful: a port that adds USB, memory card readers, etc. PLUS the price drop: $799 with 256 is a great price (until new ones are released this fall anyway! it was $949 at Apple when I purchased on Amazon). SUPER GREAT FEATURE: when setting up you just put your old iPad - or iPhone!! - near the new one and take a pic of the fractal on new iPad and -tada - your Apple ID and all your apps and data are moved to new iPad. (yes it takes some time but much less than rebuilding a new iPad from scratch). I advise buying the 3 year Apple care plan - which you can do directly from the settings on the iPad. Cons: New UBC: comes with one but you’ll need to buy new ones - it’s a different wall jack too - if, like me, you need chargers at work and home it’s annoying - but inevitable that all those FireWires & jackS I have around are DOA. That’s pretty minor. Overall I love this item! Get the pencil - it’s actually worth the money because there’s really no comparison to cheaper ones: I tried them but they were not good at all. Only caveat: pencil charges ONLY by magnetic connection on side of iPad and if that’s the only thing holding it to IPAD it won’t stay attached very long.
great for drawing on the go!
By Seo Ortega - Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2020
Verified Amazon Purchase
Love it a whole lot, I use it almost everyday for drawing. I'm on the go a lot since I'm still required to attend work midst this pandemic. I have a cintiq at home but it's far too heavy and bulky to carry often so switching to the ipad pro was a great choice. I'd had the surface pro as well but quickly returned it as it didn't fit my drawing needs personally. The ipad pro however, as great as it is, has a screen slip issue. The glass is smooth, which is fine but if you use it for drawing purposes...it's not ideal. Since I use the pencil, the 2.0 pencil, the glass being as smooth as it is seems to slip often when drawing. I don't particularly press too hard when I draw on tablets, but I'd noticed immediately that there would be little extra strokes or dash-like marks where I was drawing a simple straight line. It was most noticeable when I drew circles! To solve the issue I figure I needed a screen protector, and since I enjoy the procreate app I wanted to get a matte protector that feels like drawing naturally. I found one from Paperlike (don't buy one from Amazon as these are FAKE, please shop from Paperlike's actual site to support them properly!!) that I've been using for 3-4months now and am extremely happy with my purchase. Doesn't seem to have pen nib wear, at least nothing noticeable yet. But keep in mind: screen protectors with matte textures WILL eventually wear down pen nibs, esp if you know yourself to press hard. Another note about this ipad version: I preferred waiting for this version of the ipad pro to release since I don't trust myself with how the 1.0 pencil charges. What I've seen friends do while on the go with the previous ipad versions was they'd just charge the pencil by connecting it to the ipad BUT the pencil sticks out horribly...if you accidentally bump it it'll snap. So I found it incredibly stupid. Yes you can bring the pencils charger around with you, but the idea of "on the go" shouldn't mean "carry more things", so I opted on waiting for this ipad pro version that charges the (2.0) pencil magnetically. For everyday/travel, I bought a case that protects the pencil AND doesn't block it from charging magnetically. It's the black "Sokka", also from amazon I've had the ipad for roughly 4 months now and have no lasting issues with it. Works great and extremely happy with my drawing table choice!p
Excellent Device - MUCH better than the regular iPad
By Lara Russell - Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2020
Verified Amazon Purchase
I loved this device. As a student and online tutor, taking virtual notes is a necessity. I knew I wanted an iPad + an Apple Pencil, but I wasn’t sure if I wanted to buy the Pro or just stick to your run of the mill iPad. I decided I would invest the money in an overall nicer product with the hopes that it would last me longer. AND IM SO GLAD I DID! As someone who has owned a regular iPad in the past, I cannot stress just how much better the Pro is. It functions better, has a more advanced UI, and records surprisingly high quality videos. Not to mention it’s fast! My iPad can edit and render 4K footage better than my MacBook can (granted, my MacBook isn’t exactly the newest model). And the Apple Pencil experience is astronomically better on the Pro. The fact that the Pencil charges magnetically pretty much guarantees my Pencil is never dead when I want to use it (and I use it at least once everyday). Also, the magnetic charging feature has the added benefit of ensuring I won’t loose the damn thing! it’s always there, attached to my iPad and ready to go whenever I need it. However, I could care less about the “reduced lag” drawing feature. You’re really only going to care about that if you’re an artist. CAVEAT: Please note that I’m not an Apple nut who buys Apple products for the sake of buying Apple products. For instance, I STILL haven’t purchased AirPods and probably never will. I’m not easily enamored by “sleek” features like the Touch Bar that are pretty cool but totally not worth the surcharge. As someone who uses the Apple Pencil every single day, I can assure you that this experience is far better than the experience you will get by using the older generation Apple Pencil and regular iPad. However, I don’t think the upgrade is worth it if you think you would only use your pencil every once in a while. Battery life note- my battery is fine for the most part, but the device takes a VERY long time to charge. Longer than my MacBook. Keep this in mind.
A very nice upgrade from ipad mini.
By Chao Chao - Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2019
Verified Amazon Purchase
The last iPad I owned was a iPad Mini 1st Gen and it was sufficient. The upgrade to the Pro is AWESOME!! I've always played around with the iPads but never felt a need for one until the iPad Pro. First thing is the screen is gorgeous! The 120 hz is buttery smooth and the colors and brightness all pop. The screen real estate is great too. I figured the bigger one would be too big for and I'm glad I stuck with the 11 inch model. At first I bought the 11 inch LTE version and like everyone said, there is a slight bend to it. Its because the antenna line needs a break and that's where the bend is. So I returned it and instead just got the Wifi version. I figured I can just hotspot my cellphone and save 400 bucks, which was worth it. I don't see a need for Cellular version when you can just hotspot your phone anyway. Performance wise this iPad is killer. I mainly bought this to try my hand at video editing and it's been great. Very easy and fast compared to the desktop. Also it's whisper quiet while I edit 4K footage. On my powerful desktop the fans sound like jet engines! Overall I'm glad I got this iPad. With the specs I can see it lasting several generations before needing another upgrade. I'm hoping they bridge the iOS and MacOS so the iPad can be a true contender to the Surface Pro.
Worthy of the upgrade from iPad Pro 10.5”
By Hoppaguy - Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2020
Verified Amazon Purchase
The Good: -Powerful and snappy performance -Face ID is more efficient and effective than finger ID -Speakers are louder and crisper -Lightweight -High resolution screen -Great for travel -New Smart Keyboard is better than previous generation as it protects the back of the iPad -New Apple Pencil 2 is better than previous generation since you charge on side of iPad -USB C is more universal of a connector -Beautiful design -LTE works well The Bad: -Expensive but powerful -No USB C to 3.5 mm headphone converter The Bottom Line: I have both the iPad Pro 10.5 (512 GB LTE) and this new iPad Pro 11 (512 GB LTE version). I travel a lot and use my iPad almost exclusively when I’m away from my desk. I use my iPad to take hand written notes exclusively and use Excel and do picture editing. This new iPad 11 compared to the 10.5 is better in every way. Probably what’s saved me the most time is Face ID. It’s just way more efficient and effective for me (no more fumbling around with my thumb). The processor and graphics are much snappier than the previous version and there’s no lag on anything I do. The speakers on this iPad are louder and clearer so I use this to watch videos and listen to music in my hotel room. Overall, I would recommend this iPad Pro 11 as a worthy upgrade from the 10.5 if you’re a heavy user of your iPad.
Shiny little powerhouse
By EFBailey - Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2019
Verified Amazon Purchase
Truthfully I wasn't sure about this machine when I first bought it. As an owner of an old sixth-gen iPad, I'd often found that device to be lacking in things I thought I could use it for - so, when all the artists I knew started raving about the iPad Pro as the best tool available for illustration, I had my share of questions even once I'd decided to take the plunge. Now, I've been making digital art since 1999, when I first discovered how to pixel with a ball mouse and the help of MS Paint. It took a few years for me to learn about the joys of digital tablets, but when I did, I used everything I could get my hands on, from the Intuos and Bamboo lines of Wacom products to the Deco line of XP-Pens to a venerable 2-in-1 laptop that probably served me for more sketches than anything else to date. Out of all of them, until this year, by far the best of the lot had been the Cintiq 13HD I saved up for in 2015. Its minimal parallax, general responsiveness, and reliable drivers made it the easiest to draw with, the easiest to get good results with, and far and away the most comfortable for large projects. So when this iPad blew it out of the water, I was a bit surprised. Just to be clear: my main computer for graphic design is not a slouch in any department. It's running an RTX 2060 GPU, 16 GB of RAM, and a 9th gen i7 processor. Not quite the best there is, but nothing to sneeze at, either. So when I say that this iPad can draw faster with larger brushes on larger canvases, save bigger projects in less time, and can handle more complex brush mechanics with less lag than I have ever experienced on a desktop device, those are not empty words. I have only one usability complaint - the texture of the screen. And that's a matter of personal preference, ingrained in me over years of using paper-textured drawing tablets. Despite this minor gripe, I am frequently finding that I can get more done in less time with the iPad than I can with my desktop PC, solely because of the lack of brush lag. Whether this is because mobile art programs are more efficient in how they handle their brush engines, I can't say, but there is a marked difference in performance when I transfer my project files over for their final spit and polish. In fact that is the main concern I have with the iPad at this stage: it is best used for on-the-go work, rather than for cleanup and polishing. But that's not even a real complaint at this point, because that's a real need in an artist's workflow - the need to get ideas down in a hurry. And it's entirely possible that the techniques that go into that polishing process are simply ones I haven't yet wrapped my head around in the iPad environment. From a productivity standpoint, it's every bit as capable as most laptops with the proper apps installed (provided you have a keyboard), and now that iPad OS has been released, it's capable of interacting with external storage with no problems whatsoever. You can draw. You can animate. You can take notes. You can write novels. You can record videos. Heck, you can write music! The biggest limitation is on multitasking - which, for my purposes at least, is not so much a limitation as a means of avoiding the demon Procrastination. I've gotten more done with this thing since I bought it than I have with my desktop computer in the same amount of time, simply because it's the tool I most often have on hand. While the form factor and operating environment might take some getting used to at first, I cannot recommend the iPad Pro highly enough for anyone who needs to make things on the go.
What’s In The Box?
By Pink Panther - Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2019
Verified Amazon Purchase
Hi everyone, I attached an unboxing video in hopes that you get an idea of what comes in the box. I have been playing around with the iPad for around 4-5 hours and I will give you my review comparing two different iPads. I am also setting a reminder to update my response in 30 days and then I will re-update everything when classes begin. I want to preface this by saying I purchased this iPad for class and everyday use. Anyways, I will be comparing the IPad (4th generation) and the new IPad Pro 11. There isn’t much for me to talk about, since I haven’t owned the IPad for a long period of time, so I will be comparing: responsiveness, sound quality, and the infamous Apple Pencil (2nd generation). Responsiveness: iPad (4th Generation)- This is still a great iPad in my eyes, but when you are comparing how quickly you can move from screen to screen, or the ease of using shortcuts, it doesn’t compare to the pro. vs. iPad Pro 11- Within the first few hours I enjoy how quickly I can move from app to app and screen to screen. Yet again, I am still in the first few hours, so my opinion may change within the next thirty days. Sound Quality: iPad (4th generation)- I don’t have much to say about the sound quality of the 4th gen. I love watching YouTube videos on it, and it gets me from point A to point B. iPad Pro 11- I’m a fan of how loud this thing is. Of course, I will probably never have it at max volume, but it is nice knowing that I have the option to do so. I watched a few reviews before purchasing the iPad, and apparently there is a difference between the 10.5, 11, and 12.9 iPad pros volume (I know, I know, duh). So, if sound quality/volume is your thing, I would go for the 12.9. I never listen to audio on my iPad, so it wasn’t a big deal to me. Is it worth it to purchase the Apple Pencil (2nd generation)? As of right now, I can’t really say and have nothing to compare it against. So far I will say that I enjoy using the pencil within the notability app, and I like double tapping the pen and it swapping from pencil to eraser. And the ability to charge the pen by simply attaching it to the side of the iPad is icing on the cake. Overall, the IPad Pro is phenomenal and I would choose it over the 4th generation anyday. Will this thought change? Maybe; maybe not. But I intend on updating this review in thirty days, and I will be sure to add battery life (both the iPad and pencil) and a list of cons to my full review. If this review/unboxing video was helpful, please let Amazon know by clicking the helpful button below. It would make my day!
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