2 But that’s the weight distribution of the iPad with Magic Keyboard right-side up. Even if you give yourself a little bit of an opening to break the initial magnetic seal, you can’t really open an upside down MacBook one-handed because as you try to raise the heavy part (which is now on top), the bottom part rises with it, because the hinge is stiffer than the bottom (the display half) is heavy. Illustrative Exercise: Turn a MacBook Air upside down and try opening it one-handed. But mainly it’s because the iPad with Magic Keyboard is so top-heavy. Part of this is that the combination of the magnets and stiff primary hinge forms a strong seal. Opening the iPad Magic Keyboard is a two-handed operation. You know how with a regular laptop, when you want to open it, you just set it down where you want it, closed, and you open the lid just by lifting it with one of your thumbs? Yeah, you cannot do that with this. It’s just an entirely different allocation of weight and center of gravity, by necessity. But once you start using it, just for a few minutes, you can feel why it has to be so different. Your first impression, like mine, is likely to be off-base just because it’s so different. An iPad Pro is so much heavier than a MacBook top case that of course the Magic Keyboard hinge system has to be not just a little stiffer than a MacBook hinge, but way stiffer. It’s clever in several ways, but it cannot defy the laws of physics. Here’s why an iPad Magic Keyboard feels nothing like a MacBook: because it’s not actually magic. The iPad Magic Keyboard is to iPad-as-laptop accessories what AirPods were to earbuds: a game changer. I went from that “ I don’t like the way this thing feels at all” first impression to “ I can’t wait to start raving about how great this thing is” in 15 minutes. Once I let go of my preconceptions, I fell in love. You instinctively reject it.īut water isn’t bad. Going in with a set of expectations even loosely based on a hope like mine - for something that feels even vaguely MacBook-y - is like expecting a sip of piping hot coffee and it turns out your mug is filled with cold water. What I was hoping for was something approximating the feel and experience of a MacBook - a little more top heavy, a little stiffer at the hinge to accommodate that extra top-heaviness - but basically I wanted an iPad-as-laptop that feels like a MacBook Air. But where I say expecting I really mean hoping for. And I knew the iPad-as-laptop was going to be top-heavy, but not this top-heavy. I mean like “ What the hell is going on here?” stiff, “ Is there some sort of packaging attached that I neglected to remove?” stiff - which, needless to say, was not what I was expecting at all. The hinge was way stiffer than I expected. Then I did attach my iPad Pro (immediate thought: “Man, these magnets are strong”), closed and opened the iPad-as-laptop configuration a few times, and formed a crushingly disappointing first impression. Greatly anticipating its arrival, I unboxed the iPad Pro Magic Keyboard as soon as it appeared at my door, and before I even attached my iPad Pro, I was put off. The iPad Magic Keyboard Monday, 20 April 2020
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