Microsoft’s new Flex Keyboard is better, but why can’t anyone make a great detachable keyboard?
Tablet computers are becoming impossibly powerful, and this year's new releases prove it. The new iPad Pro is Apple's thinnest device ever smaller in thickness than an iPod Nano and yet it includes the company's most powerful M4 chipset. The just-announced Surface Pro 11 has the Snapdragon X chipset, and that platform is going to give Apple Silicon a run for its money. So, what's holding tablets back? The popular answer is software, and it applies to both the Surface Pro 11 and the iPad Pro. Windows 11 is still lacking in optimization for touchscreens and Arm chips, and iPadOS is, well, iPadOS. But if you ask me, I'll give you a different answer: it's their detachable keyboards.
Tablet computers are becoming impossibly powerful, and this year’s new releases prove it. The new iPad Pro is Apple’s thinnest device ever smaller in thickness than an iPod Nano and yet it includes the company’s most powerful M4 chipset. The just-announced Surface Pro 11 has the Snapdragon X chipset, and that platform is going to give Apple Silicon a run for its money. So, what’s holding tablets back? The popular answer is software, and it applies to both the Surface Pro 11 and the iPad Pro. Windows 11 is still lacking in optimization for touchscreens and Arm chips, and iPadOS is, well, iPadOS. But if you ask me, I’ll give you a different answer: it’s their detachable keyboards.
Nicholas Dahlstrøm
Norway
Norway
Published by: aplhsindia.in
