When
Apple
CEO
Tim
Cook
and
a
bunch
of
his
deputies
take
the
virtual
stage
next
week
to
announce
new
iPads,
they’re
going
to
spend
a
lot
of
time
talking
about
specs.
If
the
rumors
are
true,
we’re
going
to
get
new
iPad
Pros
with
OLED
screens
and
thinner
bodies,
new
Airs
with
faster
chips
and
a
correctly
placed
front
camera,
and
a
couple
of
new
accessories.
Before
they
even
launch,
I
feel
confident
telling
you
these
are
the
best
iPads
ever.
But
after
all
these
years,
I
still
don’t
know
how
to
tell
you
whether
you
should
want
an
iPad.
Or
what
you’d
want
to
do
with
it.
This
has
been
true
forever,
of
course.
The
iPad
is
the
jack-of-all-trades
in
Apple’s
lineup,
a
terrific
device
in
many
ways
that
still
feels
increasingly
redundant
now
that
so
many
people
have
big
phones
and
long-lasting
laptops.
Apple
seems
to
have
spent
the
last
decade-plus
enamored
with
the
idea
of
the
iPad
as
a
shapeshifter
—
a
device
that
can
be
exactly
what
you
need
at
any
given
time.
The
company
loves
that
the
iPad’s
use
case
is
hard
to
pin
down,
that
it
means
different
things
to
different
people.
It’s
a
fun,
good,
ambitious
idea:
The
One
Gadget
To
Rule
Them
All.
The
way
to
make
that
happen,
though,
is
not
to
upgrade
the
chips
or
move
the
buttons
or
redesign
the
rounded
corners.
It’s
to
focus
less
on
the
iPad
itself
and
more
on
the
things
you
attach
to
it.
There’s
a
chance
that
accessories
might
be
the
star
of
the
show
next
week.
Just
look
at
the
surprisingly
unsubtle
invite
to
the
“Let
Loose”
event:
usually
there
are
tea
leaves
to
read
and
we’re
left
trying
to
decipher
vague
shapes,
but
this
time,
there’s
just
an
Apple
Pencil
front
and
center.
Reports
have
indicated
that
we’re
likely
to
see
a
new
Pencil
at
the
event,
with
interchangeable
magnetic
tips
for
different
uses
and
a
new
“squeeze”
gesture
for
quickly
adding
objects
to
your
artwork.
Focusing
on
the
Pencil
makes
a
certain
kind
of
niche
sense:
the
iPad
is
nothing
if
not
a
big
touchscreen,
and
it’s
the
only
Apple
device
that
you
can
draw
and
write
on
in
this
way.
Apple’s
AI
researchers
have
been
working
on
tools
to
help
artists
and
animators
with
their
work
and
on
a
system
for
making
art
in
tandem
with
an
AI
model
—
you
prompt,
it
creates;
you
edit,
it
refines.
For
anyone
who
does
this
kind
of
visual
art,
a
super-powered
Pencil
could
be
incredibly
compelling.
The
“Let
Loose”
event
is
clearly
about
the
Pencil.Image:
Apple
Apple
is
also
rumored
to
be
launching
a
new
Magic
Keyboard
that
makes
the
iPad
even
more
laptop-like.
The
new
model
will
apparently
be
made
of
aluminum
and
will
have
a
bigger
trackpad.
(It
hopefully
will
also
stop
randomly
just
falling
apart.)
A
better
keyboard
won’t
immediately
make
the
iPad
a
great
laptop,
but
I’m
not
sure
a
great
laptop
is
what
Apple
is
trying
to
build.
It
already
has
a
bunch
of
those!
I’m
not
really
on
the
“put
macOS
on
the
iPad,
you
cowards”
train,
either.
The
MacBook
is
great.
I
think
the
iPad’s
modular
potential
is
actually
much
bigger.
If
Apple
wants
to
get
there,
it
needs
more
accessories
—
so,
so
many
more
accessories.
The
iPad
is
a
screen
and
a
processor,
and
everything
else
should
be
an
add-on
for
whenever
you
need
it.
Give
the
gamers
a
controller
and
an
external
GPU.
Give
the
music
lovers
a
speaker
dock,
and
give
the
smart
home
fanatics
a
bunch
of
buttons
that
connect
to
various
devices.
The
photographers
need
lenses;
the
spreadsheeters
need
a
keyboard
with
function
keys.
The
Pencil
and
the
Magic
Keyboard
are
a
start,
but
Apple
needs
to
do
much
more.
The
company
needs
to
spend
less
time
worrying
about
the
iPad
itself
—
a
device
famous
for
how
long
it
lasts
and
that
hardly
anyone
is
using
to
its
full
potential
— and
more
time
on
how
to
make
it
more
than
just
a
tablet.
(Plus,
bonus
for
Apple:
it’s
going
to
be
a
lot
easier
to
get
people
to
buy
accessories
than
to
convince
them
to
upgrade
their
iPad
when
they
don’t
need
to.)
The
ultra-modular
vision
for
the
iPad
is
enticing,
and
I
hope
Apple
continues
to
lean
into
it,
but
it’s
near
impossible
to
pull
off.
Just
ask
Essential
how
it
went
trying
to
build
a
device
and
an
accessory
ecosystem.
Or
ask
Google.
Or
Asus.
Or
Fairphone
or
Samsung
or
Motorola
or
Blocks
or
Phonebloks
or
any
of
the
other
companies
that
never
pulled
it
off.
It
requires
building
software
that
can
be
all
things
to
all
people
all
the
time
and
hardware
that
is
beautiful,
thin,
light,
long-lasting,
and
totally
remixable.
I’m
not
even
sure
it’s
possible
to
do
all
of
that,
but
I
know
the
iPad
and
iPadOS
ain’t
it.
The
problem
with
the
iPad’s
all-in-one
approach
so
far
is
that
you
can’t
just
build
a
device
that’s
sort
of
okay
at
everything
and
hope
that’s
enough.
The
sort-of-okay
device
already
exists
— it’s
your
smartphone!
The
iPad
has
to
be
more
than
that:
more
flexible,
more
powerful,
more
long-lasting,
more
useful.
That’s
hard
to
build
into
a
device,
but
Apple’s
actually
done
a
pretty
good
job.
The
harder
part
is
building
the
ecosystem
—
and
building
the
software
that
can
support
it.
You
need
something
that
is
at
once
for
power
users
and
newbies,
for
tinkerers
and
simpletons,
for
people
who
love
keyboard
shortcuts
and
the
people
who
would
prefer
to
never
type
again.
You
can’t
just
build
a
device
that’s
sort
of
okay
at
everything
and
hope
that’s
enough
Ultimately,
the
biggest
problem
for
Apple
might
just
be
math.
The
current
iPad
Pro
starts
at
$799,
which
is
already
more
expensive
than
some
MacBook
Air
models.
Want
cellular
connectivity
so
you
can
use
the
iPad
anywhere?
That’s
another
$200,
but
a
good
modular
gadget
needs
it.
The
current-gen
Pencil
is
another
$129;
the
Magic
Keyboard,
another
$299.
(I
don’t
yet
know
what
the
new
models
will
cost,
but
Apple’s
not
really
in
the
habit
of
making
things
cheaper.)
That’s
$1,328
for
the
full
iPad
experience,
and
we’ve
only
scratched
the
surface
of
what
this
device
could
do
with
the
right
accessories
and
app
support.
And
so
far,
when
Apple
does
introduce
new
accessories,
it
has
mostly
just
made
things
more
confusing.
Where
does
all
of
this
leave
Apple?
Stuck.
The
iPad
is
great,
it’s
a
smashing
success,
it’s
a
terrific
device,
I
love
the
iPad,
but
the
iPad
seems
to
be
stuck
in
an
endless
upgrade
loop
without
ever
actually
getting
better.
I
suspect
we’re
going
to
see
a
lot
of
iPadOS-related
news
at
WWDC
next
month
—
that’s
where
Apple
tends
to
do
its
software
talking,
and
all
signs
point
to
a
huge
focus
on
AI.
The
iPad
could
be
a
natural
place
to
bring
a
lot
of
AI
features,
particularly
in
image
and
video
editing.
As
for
next
week’s
announcement,
though,
we’re
likely
to
hear
an
awful
lot
about
OLED
screens
and
chip
upgrades.
But
pay
attention
to
all
the
devices
in
the
iPad’s
universe
that
aren’t
the
iPad
itself.
If
Apple
wants
to
make
its
tablet
into
the
world-beating
device
it
could
be,
it’s
going
to
need
to
accessorize.
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