86 MACWORLD AUGUST 2021
FEATURE REVIEW: 12.9-INCH i PAD PRO (2021)
SPEED TO SPARE, LITERALLY
The other upgrade Apple brought to this
year’s iPad Pro is an M1 processor just like
the one in the Apple silicon Macs. And just
like the one in the Apple silicon Macs, it’s
crazy fast.
If you’ve seen benchmarks for the
24-inch iMac (fave.co/3AvIV7y) or 13-inch
MacBook Pro (fave.co/2PXzhbw), you’ll
know exactly what the iPad Pro brings.
Compared to the A14 in the iPad Air (fave.
co/3xSSsUM), it’s even faster than a
hypothetical A14X, with a tremendous
all-around speed, especially in
Geekbench’s Compute tests. And the M1
completely blew away the previous iPad
Pro when it comes to graphics.
Despite the new chip, however, you’re
not getting much better battery life. Apple
has rated every iPad it’s ever made by the
GEEKBENCH 5
CPU performance
Multi
iPad Pro (2021)
HIGHER SCORES ARE BETTER
7, 285
21,257
Single Compute
iPad Pro (2020)
4,684
12,257
iPad Air (2020)
4,197
12,728
1,718
1,588
3DMARK WILD LIFE
Graphics performance
Wild Life Extreme (Unlimited)
iPad Pro (2021)
HIGHER SCORES ARE BETTER
17, 2 1 5
18,280
18,267
Wild Life Extreme Wild Life Unlimited
iPad Pro (2020) 3,567
3,441
13,434
iPad Air (2020)
8,986
2,469
2,321
same 10 hours of battery life, give or take
an hour or so, and the iPad Pro falls firmly
within that range in my testing. That’s to
say you won’t need to worry about
plugging it in unless you use it for hours on
end or leave it unplugged for days.
Speaking of plugging it in, you’ll get the
same 18W fast charging as you did on the
2020 model—sadly there’s no wireless
charging or MagSafe yet—but the port
now supports Thunderbolt devices for
faster data transfers and higher-resolution
monitors. The only problem is Apple still
hasn’t upgraded iPadOS to match,
particularly when it comes to external
displays. The only option is to mirror the
iPad Pro’s display to a second monitor,
which is a less-than-ideal experience that
falls woefully short of a dual-screen
workstation.
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