Is Apple’s iPad no longer fulfilling its ‘Post-PC’ potential?

Is Apple’s iPad no longer fulfilling its ‘Post-PC’ potential?

For most of the year there has been⁢ some expectation Apple would introduce new iPad models along with new Macs in October. This didn’t happen. In‍ fact, the company has not introduced new iPads since last year, when it last updated the iPad and⁢ iPad Pro in October ‍2022.

At that time, people looked to the increasingly close integration between iPad and Mac as suggesting Apple sees both devices as more closely complementary than ever. That seems to be the case, given the ‍tone of Apple’s latest Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro announcements.⁤ These discuss credible creative software​ improvements that extend across both the Mac and Apple tablet lines.

Taking ‍the Pencil

The ⁣company’s decision not to update the iPads when it introduced M3 Macs may ⁣have been the reason the company decided to shunt the creative app releases to⁢ the following week, while rewarding iPad users with a⁢ USB-C Apple Pencil a week before its ‘Scary’ time.

That’s all a little trivial, but does seem to suggest that at some​ point ‍there was⁢ an expectation of a longer keynote — with new iPads taking a co-starring role.

In the run up to⁢ the ‌Apple event,⁢ there was still​ some expectation for ⁢a new iPad mini. That didn’t happen, meaning Apple’s smallest $499+ tablet ‌was last‌ refreshed in 2021 ‌and now runs ‍a two-year old processor. Nobody now seems to seriously expect new iPad models until early 2024 — and even those updates​ will begin with “more minor” refreshes in March.

That presumably means updates to the standard​ iPad ​(last improved this time last year), iPad mini, and⁢ perhaps ⁣iPad Air. If that’s ⁢right (and it’s an if), that suggests iPad Pro upgrades may‌ have to wait until later ‌summer/early fall of 2024. (Also speculative).

⁤ So what?

Apple’s iPad business is strong, but weak. The company holds the lion’s share of tablet sales, so it​ doesn’t really‌ matter‌ when it ships new⁣ models, does it? Actually, it sort of does.

The company admitted weakness in its iPad range during the last couple of investor calls. It’s‍ not a bad ‌weakness — the range‌ still generated $6.4 billion in revenue and competitors still can’t match what⁤ iPads can do — such as running pro video and music ‍production applications. But the momentum of the product line just doesn’t seem to be there.

That revenue figure is down 10%, and it’s interesting that ‌more than half of those ⁤purchasing a new ⁣iPad are new to the device. While customer satisfaction sits around 98%, this suggests a lot of existing owners are holding off on an iPad upgrade because they don’t see any reason ‌to do so.

The platform is well liked, but people aren’t upgrading, and it’s only the absence of ⁤credible competition in the space⁤ that’s keeping‌ Apple’s lead. Though that is ​also ‌a market to tease into action with a strong product update.

No change

Apple doesn’t expect to​ encourage that activity yet.

“We expect the ⁢year-over-year revenue performance for both iPad and…

2023-11-11 02:41:02
Post from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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